LaCie d2 user manual FireWire Questions & Answers, What Does Ieee 1394 Mean?

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LaCie d2 DL DVD±RW Drive – Toast 7 Titanium

6. FireWire Questions & Answers

User’s Manual

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6. FireWire Questions & Answers

What Does IEEE 1394 Mean?

IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) refers to the engineering corps that developed the 1394th standard, defining the high-performance serial input/output (I/O) bus used to connect peripheral devices. There are now two standards: IEEE 1394a, which refers to the original standard adopted in 1995, and IEEE 1394b, which refers to the new standard, adopted in 2002.

What Is The Relationship Between IEEE 1394, FireWire, iLink And DV?

These four names all refer to the same interface:

IEEE 1394 is the term commonly used in the computer industry.

FireWire is the brand name used by Apple.

iLink is the brand name used by Sony for both consumer electronics and personal computers.

DV is short for “Digital Video,” and is used as the logo for the interface on most video camcorders.

What Are The Benefits Of The FireWire Interfaces?

The FireWire interface is a fast, cross-platform serial bus, and is ideal for digital audio, video and graphic applications that demand plenty of bandwidth. Both versions of FireWire offer Plug & Play connectivity, so all you have to do is plug in your drive and begin using it, they also allow up to 63 devices to be connected via a single bus and offer peer-to-peer connectivity, enabling multiple computers and FireWire devices to be connected at the same time. FireWire also supports both isochronous and asynchronous capabilities, meaning that it can guarantee real-time data delivery, so there is no danger of inaccurately ordered or delayed frames.

What Is The Difference Between FireWire 400 And FireWire 800?

Essentially, the main difference between the two interfaces can be summed up in one word: speed. FireWire 800 effectively doubles the bandwidth of the original FireWire 400 interface. The new FireWire 800 interface offers truly impressive results, with speeds up to 800Mb/s for a single bus, and even greater for several buses in RAID 0 configurations.

Other key advancements include the support of increased cabling distances and a newly enhanced arbitration architecture. Utilizing cables constructed of professional-grade glass optical fiber, when both devices are connected via a FireWire 800 hub, FireWire 800 can burst data across 100 meters of cable.

The new arbitration scheme greatly improves on the existing architecture by incorporating advanced 8B10B data encoding (based on codes used by Gigabit Ethernet and Fibre Channel), which reduces signal distortion, and also improves the arbitration time by prepping the arbitration while the current data packet is being sent, so that data is sent as soon as the current transmission is completed.

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Contents How To Use This Manual Table of Contents Page Page Page Health, Safety and General Use Precautions Health and Safety PrecautionsGeneral Use Precautions Introduction What Your LaCie Drive Can DoMinimum System Requirements Your LaCie DriveMac Users Package Contents Views Of The Drive Front ViewSI if Rear ViewCables And Connectors FireWireInstalling Your LaCie Drive Installing The Recording Software Mac OS 10.3.9 and laterConnecting The Power Supply Cable aConnecting The Interface Cable Drive, please see .4. Installing Multiple DevicesConnecting Multiple Devices Disconnecting Your LaCie DriveUsing Your LaCie Drive Supported DVD/CD FormatsAccessing Discs Inserting DiscsWriting Discs CD Writing Methods Ejecting Discs Tech Tips CD and DVD Media DefinitionsFile System Formats Definitions DVD CapacityDVD-Video Regional Playback Zones Optimizing Data Transfers What Are The Benefits Of The FireWire Interfaces? FireWire Questions & AnswersWhat Does Ieee 1394 Mean? What Are The Ideal Uses For FireWire? What Do I Do If My Computer Does Not Have a FireWire Port?Troubleshooting Manual UpdatesProblem Questions to Ask Possible Solutions Mac UsersDrive is not Is the drive connected to Recognized by Your computer Using another piece of media Contacting Customer Support Before You Contact Technical SupportLaCie Technical Support Warranty Glossary Page