USB3.1 ports and connectors are often color-coded Teal or Blue; USB 3.1 ports and connectors can be of Type A, Type B, or Type C variety; Variations include Gen 2 (10 Gb/s), later referred to as 3.2 Gen 1x1; USB 3.0. Released 2008; Also known as SuperSpeed USB; Speeds up to 5Gb/s; USB 3.0 ports and connectors are often color
AUSB 3.0 connection requires five conductors, and the connectors are blue in color. Backward compatibility is typically provided by including four additional conductors, as shown in the . #4. Hmm, looks ok. I'd try a Clear CMOS. Unplug all USB devices except the keyboard on one of the problematic ports and see if you can navigate the BIOS with it (determining if it has anything to do with Windows or if it's hardware-level).
Butremember, not all USB-C ports are USB 3.2 Gen 2×2. A USB-C port can be either USB 3.2 Gen (20Gbps) 2×2 or USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps). The old versions are black, and the new ones are blue. This is not entirely true. Even the USB-IF does not mandate USB ports to be any color. The standard blue colour can be replaced with
Blue USB-A or USB-B: USB 3.0 SuperSpeed : Teal: USB-A or USB-B: USB 3.1 Gen 1 : Red: Sleep-and-Charge USB-A: USB 3.1 Gen 2 USB 3.2: Usually denotes an "always on" port Not all devices or ports will
USB3.0 (now known as USB 3.1 Gen 1) usually sports blue or turquoise colored ports and can reach a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 5 Gbps, which is 10 times faster than USB 2.0. USB 3.0 Thereceptacles on USB 3.0 ports are usually blue to distinguish from the receptacles on USB 2.0 ports, which are black. So, if the PC has a blue port, that is a good indication of USB 3.0 support. Note this is not a requirement of the official USB specification, rather a convention adopted by some PC makers. Figure 1 shows a typical USB 2.0 port.
TheUSB port (also called a socket, jack or receptacle) is the part of the device that the USB connector plugs into. USB ports are sometimes referred to as “female”, as they accept a “male” connector. The different types of USB ports, for both the 2.0 and 3.0 versions, are listed in the table below: USB type USB 2.0 port

BothUSB-A and USB-C ports can support USB 2.0 to 3.2, which makes the whole thing a bit confusing since a USB port has both a connector type (USB-C vs. USB-A, or rounded vs. rectangular) and a

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  • are all usb 3.0 ports blue