USB-C is the latest connector type on many devices, including new MacBooks and some Android phones. It’s a reversible connector that can plug into either side of the device. The D-shaped icon next to my USB-C port means that the port can be used for both USB 3.1 Gen 1 (5Gbps) and USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10Gbps). This is great for transferring large files quickly, as well as charging devices. ..
Most of the time, it is pretty simple to figure out what the various ports and the printed symbols next to them on our computers are for, but every so often, some new or different symbol pops up. With that in mind, today’s SuperUser Q&A post has the answer to a curious reader’s question.
Today’s Question & Answer session comes to us courtesy of SuperUser—a subdivision of Stack Exchange, a community-driven grouping of Q&A web sites.
The Question
SuperUser reader BloodPhilia wants to know what the D-shaped icon next to a USB-C port means:
What does the D-shaped icon next to a USB-C port mean?
At first, I thought it stood for power delivery, but I could not find any matching symbols related to the “standard” on Google. Also, my laptop has a separate power input for charging.
The Answer
SuperUser contributors Journeyman Geek and chx have the answer for us. First up, Journeyman Geek:
Followed by the answer from chx:
Have something to add to the explanation? Sound off in the comments. Want to read more answers from other tech-savvy Stack Exchange users? Check out the full discussion thread here.
USB-C has four high speed lanes that can carry a wide variety of signals, which is really nice, but the problem is there are no requirements to show or indicate to the user what the capabilities are using colors or icons. Traditionally, the mess was somewhat the other way around, with the same signal, but a lot of different connectors (SCSI, both parallel and serial, is notorious for this).
You needed adapters then as well, but at least you had a really good idea what it could be just by looking at a connector (outside of the mess with EGA and CGA starting in 1984 before VGA killed both of them off in 1987, something that affected far fewer people). The hope is that this time (eventually), you will not need adapters and everything will just work.
Here are a few things it might or might not be capable of, but only one at a time:
Charging the device itself with 20V / 3A. Charging a connected device with 20V / 3A. Providing a DisplayPort 1. 4 signal (you will need a passive adapter). The icon mentioned is the DisplayPort logo, so it is used correctly to help clarify a little bit of the chaos that USB-C is (but you still cannot tell whether the port is 1. 3 or 1. 4 capable though). Providing an HDMI 1. 4b signal (you will need a passive adapter). Perhaps the HDMI logo will be used, but then again, it may not. Providing a Thunderbolt 3. 0 signal, which is PCI Express, DisplayPort 1. 2, USB 3. 1 (Generation 2), and USB Power delivery multiplexed into a signal served over the same connector using more expensive active cables. Typically, a Lightning Bolt port is used, but guess what? That is not a requirement. Providing USB 3. 1 (Generation 2, a. k. a. 10 Gbit/s speed USB). Some motherboards will give you USB-C connectors carrying USB 3. 1 (Generation 1), formerly known as USB 3. 0 signals, at 5 Gbit/s just to have more variety, because clearly, there is not enough of that. There is MHL too.
All in all, be very glad that you have at least some indication of what your port is capable of. You do not always have that luxury:
It is literally anyone’s guess what are these ports are capable of. They really should have provided some way to clarify this mess, but they did not. If a good variety of colors and icons versus the space constraints are not viable, then provide a standard way for software to display a capability list for users. A diagnostics tool that you could plug into a USB-C port and have it give you a list of what it is capable of would also be very helpful (i.e. this port can provide signals A, B, C, and accepts inputs D, E, F).
Because the “just work” dream is clearly off, if you plug a USB-C cable into a monitor, you do not really have any idea whether it will work or not. The monitor might require a Thunderbolt signal, a DisplayPort signal may be enough, or just USB may be enough because it is using DisplayLink technology, in which case, the host device needs a proprietary driver.
For the past 10-15 years, everyone has grown accustomed to the fact that you just plugged in a USB device and it worked (perhaps after installing a driver). USB-C, however, is a brave new world.
Image Credit: DisplayPort.org