Indeed, that there’s no reliable evidence yet produced that anyone can hear the difference even between the CD audio standard (16 bits, 44.1kHz) and 24/96. Now one might argue (and you won’t get much disagreement from me) that no-one needs higher resolution than that. USB Audio Class 1.0 was limited to audio with 24 bits of resolution and a sampling rate of 96kHz. So what’s so good about USB Audio Class 2.0? And, as I’ve just discovered, there’s now a USB Audio Class 3.0 which promises wider support for audio formats, and likely requires the bandwidth provided by USB 3.0 or later.īut both USB Audio Class 1.0 and 2.0 devices work perfectly happily with USB 2.0, USB 3.0 or USB 3.1, even if a USB Type-C connector is in use. USB Audio Class 1.0 was introduced way back in 1998 and was limited, in part, by the maximum data throughput available in USB 1.1. In general, it requires at least USB 2.0 because it needs the higher data rates to push through the required amount of data. First USB Audio Class 2.0 is not the same thing as USB 2.0.
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