What Is FireWire? The Legacy of High-Speed Data Transfer Technology
FireWire (IEEE 1394) was a high-speed data transfer standard developed by Apple that controlled professional audio and video markets throughout the 2000s, offering superior performance to first-generation USB components, including the ability to daisy-chain, hot-plug, and transfer isochronous data. FireWire was later supplanted by USB, which is both technically inferior (only up to 800 Mbps) and can only support 63 devices without a hub, but nonetheless, its innovations are still visible today in newer connectivity technologies like Thunderbolt and USB-C.