There's no point of having USB 3.0 ports on our smartphones or tablets
Samsung's Galaxy Note 3 is one of the few smartphones that feature a somewhat unusual USB port on it. It's not a "revolutionary" or a "breakthrough". Quite frankly, it's kind of silly. Having USB 3.0 isn't important on a tablet or a smartphone.
USB 3.0 was first introduced in 2008 that added a new transfer mode called "SuperSpeed", and enabled data transfers up to 5Gbps - which is more than 10 times faster than USB 2.0, which maxes out at 480Mbps.
5Gbps is a lot of data that you can transfer, but the question here is what are you going to transfer? Most music is stored in the cloud, movies are generally delivered by Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, or Youtube. Heck even, there's a 50GB Dropbox Free storage for every Note 3 purchase!
The only real advantage to the extra speed is transferring data off your device onto your computer. However, since your device is likely to be connected to your wireless network, it may be just as easy to wirelessly transfer your data as it would be to hook it up using wires.
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