I know competition is good, but take this example:
Hard drives as we know them have been around for a couple decades now. I'm not still using the 2,400 RPM ATA/33 hard drive that I was using back so many years ago, though. Maxtor, and IBM, and Sygate, and Western Digital (among others) have been competing, and making products with higher performance, and greater affordability. Now a 120 GB 7,200 RPM ATA/100 hard drive with an 8 MB buffer is available to me for what...about $170. There aren't really competing technologies out there, meaning all the manufacturers are concentrating on making drives for my standardized EIDE interface.
There wasn't a real competetor for USB 1 (with the exception of Macintosh's recent integration of FireWire), so it was a fairly "Universal" bus (which I don't percieve to have hindered technical development).
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