As individuals, we don’t have the legal means to fight every wrong against us. It’s not a good feeling, but one has to move on, and accept that it will happen. I’m also a creative, and have seen my work plagiarised so that somebody else gained commercially. I’m not going to get too deep into the politics of this I know clones are a shady industry, and suck for the originator of GDEMU. Burning fresh copies of games solves the first problem, but not the latter. Not only are the optical discs themselves deteriorating, but the laser units in the GD drives also have a finite lifespan, and repairing them could become costly, if parts even keep being made. My PAL version of Rez was parted with during a desperate period of my life for about a tenner. Most of the games I sold are obviously the ones I want to play, too. I used to have a fairly good original game collection, but sold a lot of them long ago (the most familiar of woeful tales to so many of my generation). As I have a launch model, it runs backups without needing a boot disc, but I had to wait while the burn took place, and then cross my fingers that it was successful. I connected it all up, and got my games out. My waned love for the Dreamcast was recently rekindled due to a desire to play Crazy Taxi. There is no USB 3.0 Mini-B connector.IMPORTANT: Doing any of the modifications on this page, especially the one to the power circuit, are entirely at your own risk. USB Mini-B plugs are physically compatible with both USB 2.0 Mini-B and Mini-AB receptacles. USB Mini-B: The USB 2.0 Mini-B plug is rectangular with a small indention on either side, almost looking like a stretched out piece of bread when looking at it head-on.
USB Mini-A plugs are only compatible with USB Mini-AB receptacles. USB Mini-A: The USB 2.0 Mini-A plug is rectangular, but one side is more rounded.USB Micro-B plugs are physically compatible with both USB 2.0 Micro-B and Micro-AB receptacles, as well as USB 3.0 Micro-B and Micro-AB receptacles.
USB 2.0 Micro-B plugs are very small and rectangular, but the two corners on one of the long sides are beveled.USB 3.0 Micro-B plugs are compatible with both USB 3.0 Micro-B receptacles and USB 3.0 Micro-AB receptacles. USB Micro-B: USB 3.0 Micro-B plugs look almost identical to USB 3.0 Micro-A plugs in that they appear as two individual, but connected, plugs.USB Micro-A plugs are physically compatible with both USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 Micro-AB receptacles. USB 2.0 Micro-A plugs are very small and rectangular, resembling in many ways a shrunken USB Type A plug.USB 3.0 Micro-A plugs are only compatible with USB 3.0 Micro-AB receptacles. USB Micro-A: USB 3.0 Micro-A plugs look like two different rectangular plugs fused together, one slightly longer than the other.This receptacle is physically compatible with USB 1.1 and USB 2.0 Standard-B plugs, and of course, USB 3.0 Standard-B and Powered-B plugs as well. A USB Powered-B connector is also specified in the USB 3.0 standard.USB 1.1 Type B and USB 2.0 Type B plugs are physically compatible with USB 3.0 Type B receptacles but USB 3.0 Type B plugs are not compatible with USB 2.0 Type B or USB 1.1 Type B receptacles. USB Type B: Officially called USB Standard-B, these plugs and receptacles are square shaped with an extra notch on top, most noticeable on USB 3.0 Type B connectors.
USB 1.1 Type A, USB 2.0 Type A and USB 3.0 Type A plugs and receptacles are physically compatible.