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Mini USB connectors were standardized as part of USB 2.0 in 2000. In 2007, the USB Implemeters Forum standardized Micro USB connectors, deprecating Mini USB connectors four months later.

Why? What are the advantages of Micro USB over Mini USB that made USB-IF rip out an existing standard and replace it with another one that's basically the same thing?

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    \$\begingroup\$ Quote by Russell McMahon: "A major factor in abandoning mini-USB is that it was fatally flawed mechanically." Sorry Russell, but I am missing the evidence for that as well as everyday life contradicts that either. A micro-usb is much more prone too because you don't need much efforts to push it in upside down - almost impossible on a mini-usb. just google how many users made that experience either themselves or their kids including myself on a BB Playbook and Archos IT. In my opinion it's a lousy construction, not to speak crap! \$\endgroup\$
    – user13567
    Commented Sep 26, 2012 at 11:43
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    \$\begingroup\$ The world went down hill after parallel ports stopped being the norm. Bring back DB25 I say. (seriously) \$\endgroup\$
    – cbmeeks
    Commented Jul 25, 2016 at 20:40
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    \$\begingroup\$ Today, we enjoy the fruits of USB-C! \$\endgroup\$
    – neverMind9
    Commented Jun 23, 2019 at 10:56

7 Answers 7

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Added mid 2022:
A lightly edited version of a comment by @LittleWhole

In 2022 the world is moving towards the far more robust and convenient USB-C connector. While there are still issues with USB-C (including even mechanical incompatibilities), things are slowly being addressed (i.e. USB4 standard on the protocol side) and I have only ever encountered one USB-C cable that wouldn't plug into a USB-C receptacle in my life. Adoption of USB-C is definitely picking up the pace - not just in consumer electronics, but a motor controller for my school's robotics club has even adopted USB-C

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A major flaw:

A major factor in abandoning mini-USB is that it was fatally flawed mechanically. Most people who have used a mini-USB device which requires many insertions will have experienced poor reliability after a significant but not vast number of uses.

The original mini-USB had an extremely poor insertion lifetime - about 1000 insertions total claimed. That's about once a day for 3 years. Or 3 times a day for one year. Or ... For some people that order of reliability may be acceptable and the problems may go unnoticed. For others it becomes a major issue. A photographer using a flash card reader may expend that lifetime in well under a year.

The original mini-USB connector had sides which sloped as at present but they were reasonably straight. (Much the same as the sides on a micro-A connector). These are now so rare that I couldn't find an image using a web search. This image is diagrammatic only but shows the basic shape with sloped but straight sides.

USB Mini-A receptacle

Efforts were made to address the low lifetime issues while maintaining backwards compatibility and the current "kinked sides" design was produced. Both plug and socket were changed but the sockets ("receptacle") will still accept the old straight sided plugs. This is the shape that we are all so used to that the old shape is largely forgotten.

USB Mini-B receptacle USB Mini-B plug

Unfortunately, this alteration "only sort of worked". Insertion lifetime was increased to about 5,000 cycles. This sounds high enough in theory but in practice the design was still walking wounded with respect to mechanical reliability. 5,000 cycles is a very poor rating in the connector industry. While most users will not achieve that many insertion cycles, the actual reliability in heavy use is poor.

The micro-USB connector was designed with these past failings in mind and has a rated lifetime of about 10,000 insertion cycles. This despite its apparent frailty and what may appear to be a less robust design. [This still seems woefully low to me. Time will tell].

Latching Unlike mini USB, Micro USB has a passive latching mechanism which increases retention force but which allows removal without active user action (apart from pulling). [Latching seems liable to reduce the plug "working" in the receptacle and may increase reliability].

Size matters:

The micro and mini USB connectors are of similar width. But the micro connector is much thinner (smaller vertical dimension). Some product designs were not able to accommodate the height of the mini receptacle and the new thinner receptacle will encourage and allow thinner products. A mini-USB socket would have been too tall for thin design. By way of example - a number of Motorola's "Razr" cellphones used micro-USB receptacles, thus allowing the designs to be thinner than would have been possible with a Mini-USB receptacle.

  • Specific Razr models which use MICRO-USB include RAZR2 V8, RAZR2 V9, RAZR2 V9m, RAZR2 V9x, DROID RAZR, RAZR MAXX & RAZR VE20.

Wikipedia on USB - see "durability".

Connector manufacturer Molex's micro USB page

They say:

  • Micro-USB technology was developed by the USB Implementers Forum, Inc. (USB-IF), an independent nonprofit group that advances USB technology. Molex's Micro-USB connectors offer advantages of smaller size and increased durability compared with the Mini-USB. Micro-USB connectors allow manufacturers to push the limits of thinner and lighter mobile devices with sleeker designs and greater portability.

Micro-USB replaces a majority of Mini-USB plugs and receptacles currently in use. The specification of the Micro-USB supports the current USB On-The-Go (OTG) supplement and provides total mobile interconnectivity by enabling portable devices to communicate directly with each other without the need for a host computer.

... Other key features of the product include high durability of over 10,000 insertion cycles, and a passive latching mechanism that provides higher extraction forces without sacrificing the USB's ease-of-use when synchronizing and charging portable devices.

All change:

Once all can change, all tend to. A significant driver to a common USB connector is the new USB charging standard which is being adopted by all cellphone makers. (Or all who wish to survive). The standard relates primarily to the electrical standards required to allow universal charging and chargers but a common mechanical connection system using the various micro-USB components is part of the standard. Whereas in the past it only really mattered that your 'whizzygig' could plug into its supplied power supply, it is now required that any whizzygig's power supply will fit any other device. A common plug and socket system is a necessary minimum for this to happen. While adapters can be used this is an undesirable approach. As USB charging becomes widely accepted not only for cellphones but for xxxpods, xxxpads, pda's and stuff in general, the drive for a common connector accelerates. The exception may be manufacturers whose names begin with A who consider themselves large enough and safe enough to actively pursue interconnect incompatibility in their products.

Once a new standard is widely adopted and attains 'critical mass" the economics of scale tend to drive the market very rapidly to the new standard. It becomes increasingly less cost effective to manufacture and stock and handle parts which have a diminishing market share and which are incompatible with new facilities.

I may add some more references to this if it appears there is interest - or ask Mr Gargoyle.

Large list of cellphones that use micro-USB receptacle

_______________________________ _______________________________

A few more images allowing comparisons of a range of aspects including thickness, area of panel, overall volume (all being important independently of the others to some for various reasons) and retention means.

Large Google image samples each linked to a web page

and more

Useful discussion & brief history Note: they say (and, as Bailey S also notes)

  • Why Micro types offer better durability?
    Accomplished by moving leaf-spring from the PCB receptacle to plug, the most-stressed part is now on the cable side of the connection. Inexpensive cable bears most wear instead of the µUSB device.

Maybe useful:

USB CONNECTOR GUIDE — GUIDE TO USB CABLES

USB connections compared

What is Micro USB vs Mini USB

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    \$\begingroup\$ Russell, I don't think the micro USB connector was in wide use by the time the Motorola RAZR was out. The RAZR's had mini USB connectors. \$\endgroup\$
    – W5VO
    Commented Aug 24, 2011 at 2:40
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    \$\begingroup\$ @W5VO - We're both right :-). My point was that the Razr was an early adopter. The early Razrs used mini USB. They changed to micro USB in 2007 (slimmer too I think). Here's a Razr VE20 Micro USB data cable image and another and some Razr micro USB chargers. This page has a large list of phones that use a micro USB receptacle. \$\endgroup\$
    – Russell McMahon
    Commented Aug 24, 2011 at 3:03
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Passerby - your brute force edit in deleting reference to the Rzar phone was not helpful in view of the extensive discussion about this point in the comments. While a munber of Razr phones do not use uUSB, a number do, and it allows them to be thinner than they could be if mici-USB was used. Specific Razrs which us uUSB include: Specific Razr models which use MICRO-USB include RAZR2 V8, RAZR2 V9, RAZR2 V9m, RAZR2 V9x, DROID RAZR, RAZR MAXX & RAZR VE20. | I have reinserted a comment re Razr's and added the list of relevant models. \$\endgroup\$
    – Russell McMahon
    Commented May 27, 2013 at 15:44
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    \$\begingroup\$ @Passerby - :-). You have usefully highlighted that the answer was able to be improved by editing. My intention was to cite some specific phones that attained thinness with uUSB that could not have been achieved with Mini-USB. At the time I wrote that I was not aware that some used Mini-USB BUT I provided a list of Razr's that did use uUSB and this was discussed in the notes. It's easy to see in hindsight and/or with adequate applied pedantry what can be improved in an answer - and I would probably have a new full time hobby if I went around all my answers* rererehoning them. *1500+ apparently \$\endgroup\$
    – Russell McMahon
    Commented May 27, 2013 at 16:11
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    \$\begingroup\$ @passerby - If the wording needed improving to match the supplied list and the supplied notes then you would have been doing people a service by modifying the text. But just deleting the example and not replacing it with another or noting the N models of Razr for which it is true seems to me to fall below the minimum standard of "due care" / social contract / whatever. Mayhaps it doesn't seem that way to you. Either way, thanks for bringing it to my attention, and hopefully the new wording now properly conveys reality. \$\endgroup\$
    – Russell McMahon
    Commented May 27, 2013 at 16:12
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Every time this question comes up, someone inevitably brought up the plug cycles (5000 vs 10000). My experience proves otherwise. I have used USB Mini since released (Circa 2000 'til now) and have experienced only 1 bad USB connector, and that was due to me rolling my office chair over it.

I recently switched to USB Micro just because you can't get a phone with anything other than USB Micro, and within 3 months, the connectors on 3 out of 5 chargers have connectivity issues. The remaining 2 work under the "if bend it, then it works": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0Dzp5l2PyY

None of the chargers fit snuggly into socket. The connectors are flimsy and get damaged easily. Just rolling up the charger and putting it in my pocket can cause the tip to break off.

So to summarize my data: - in 10 years, 1 USB Mini out of many have connectivity issue (due to being run over by a chair) - in 3 months, 3 out of 5 USB Micros fail and the remaining 2 are defective.

Of course, I am just one person, so N=1 may mean that I am a statistical anomaly. However, I would like to see the consortium's real world usage data.

The bottom line is nobody cares about # plugs 'til failure in laboratory situations. What the consumers care about is: how long will it last? It is quite possible that the USB Micro can withstand more plugs in laboratory environments, but in the real world, these chargers get rolled up, placed in pockets, thrown around, etc. I guess engineers sometimes forget this. Too hard, won't do it, so ignore it.

Briefly Googling for USB Micro failure vs USB Mini failure suggests that I may not be alone in this.

With respect to the "USB Micro is smaller" argument, they are the same width and only 1.2mm smaller in thickness. The average cell phone thickness is about 13-15mm. 1.2mm represents < 10% of the phone thickness, so I would argue 10% in thickness is a small price to pay for the durability improvement.

The nuisance in this is that I now have many USB Mini chargers sitting around that I have accumulated from devices in the past, and I am at a shortage for USB Micro chargers.

While cables and chargers cost close to nothing to make, they are > $10 to purchase. We know that in the industry, the profit margin for cables are very high.

Conspiracy theories aside. I would speculate that part of the move is economically motivated.

"People no longer buy chargers because they last too long. Let's come up with a new standard that don't, and come up with some BS to explain it."

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    \$\begingroup\$ Briefly googling shows that this seems to be a common nuisance for people world wide. amplicate.com/hate/microusb , forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=729552 , and the list goes on and on... Various social networking pages have started just for the purpose of "hating USB Micro". USB Mini did fine. Why switch? \$\endgroup\$
    – Thang
    Commented Apr 9, 2012 at 10:30
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    \$\begingroup\$ There is always resistance to change, but to the degree we see here? Also, why replace a better product with something that is worse? \$\endgroup\$
    – Thang
    Commented Apr 9, 2012 at 10:38
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    \$\begingroup\$ That's a faulty analogy. Digital camera is a paradigm shift and potential for improvement is there, so the people who bought into it expect improvement in the future. Do you buy a USB Micro expecting improvement in the future? It's not a paradigm shifting idea. It's just a connector. Connectors are meant to be reliable aid to the actual product. When it's not reliable, its purpose is defeated. \$\endgroup\$
    – Thang
    Commented Apr 9, 2012 at 10:41
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    \$\begingroup\$ The good thing about micro-USB is that UE has choosen it to replace all the proprietary types of connectors. That makes it good to me, and by now I didn't have any problems with it, so I can't speak against it. Nor I want to mindlessly defend it. \$\endgroup\$
    – clabacchio
    Commented Apr 9, 2012 at 10:48
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    \$\begingroup\$ In the US, USB Mini was "the standard" for many years. People got used to USB Mini, and, as far as I know, there were no issues with stability, connectivity. Cameras, cell phones, GPS, etc. all shipped with USB Mini. All of a sudden, almost over night, everything shipped with USB Micro. All of a sudden, people's cables and chargers no longer work. On top of that, new cables and chargers they get for new devices are all flimsy and don't last nearly as long. What gives? I can't blame all the hate blogs and social networking pages. \$\endgroup\$
    – Thang
    Commented Apr 9, 2012 at 10:51
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I was involved in discussions and part of the decision loop. Then a very big and leading mobile phone maker, Nokia, asked for it. They even designed most part with a leading connector maker. USB IF eventually bite the bullet and accepted. Probably 2B+ of these connectors are shipped to date.

It was Nokia who demanded it and the primary reason was size, they were desperately trying to save size and had plans around OTG.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Given that you were directly involved, I wish you provided a little bit more info about the reasons for micro-USB and against mini-USB (other than that some big OEM wanted it for unspecified reasons). \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jul 2, 2012 at 14:37
  • \$\begingroup\$ This answer gives evidence in favor of micro-USB but none against mini-USB. It's not clear why they couldn't coexist. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 30, 2018 at 10:43
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The extra-thin Micro-USB is far more suited to todays slimline portable devices (smart phones, etc). The Mini-USB just doesn't really fit right in the smart-phones etc of today.

As you rightly note, it does the exact same job as Mini-USB, even down to having an AB socket for USB-OTG Host/Device selection.

So they don't need the old Mini-USB any more. So it's deprecated. No point in having two, and the old one is too fat. So drop it in favour of the new one.

That's really all there is to it. It's thinner, and thus better.

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    \$\begingroup\$ it's funny; I have far more reliability problems with that ridiculous thin mini-usb. I love the old micro-usb "kinked edges" connector. Far more robust in my experience. \$\endgroup\$
    – akohlsmith
    Commented May 9, 2012 at 4:46
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    \$\begingroup\$ @AndrewKohlsmith: I think you mean the opposite of what you said \$\endgroup\$
    – endolith
    Commented Jan 25, 2013 at 20:55
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    \$\begingroup\$ @endolith, I think a lot of people prefer mini over micro. I find the bulkier design easier to use, can't comment on reliability, I've never had either a mini or micro usb fail. \$\endgroup\$
    – Will
    Commented Jan 29, 2013 at 18:30
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    \$\begingroup\$ @rocker9455: Yeah, I guess my experiences are the same. I've had micro USB connectors fail, but not mini. I've had trouble figuring out the correct orientation of micro in the dark, but don't remember that being a problem with mini. I want to believe that micro is better because USB org says it's better, but I guess if it was shoved into the spec by a phone manufacturer, that might not be true. \$\endgroup\$
    – endolith
    Commented Feb 5, 2013 at 16:08
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    \$\begingroup\$ You're thinking about USB C. That's different. \$\endgroup\$
    – Majenko
    Commented Oct 8, 2017 at 7:46
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While on the whole, I am satisfied with the switch to USB Micro, my only major gripe is the less obvious keying. Inserting the plug with good lighting is no problem (if you can see), but trying to plug in your cell phone after you've crawled into bed with the lights off can be a trial. As somebody who works with people with disabilities and medical conditions, I have heard from clients with compromised motor control, those with low vision, and those with distal neuropathies that they do experience a harder time plugging in their devices nowadays.

My hope is that the standard for both plug and receptacle can be altered slightly to yield a more obvious tactile marker so users can orient the connector and the device more easily. I imagine the USB-IF could do this while retaining backwards compatibility. I suspect it could be achieved simply by mandating a small raised dot or ridge on the plastic as well as a corresponding mark on the device near the connector. For clients with this complaint, I have taken to gouging their devices and chargers or using tactile paint. Did the same for myself.

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    \$\begingroup\$ The USB logo, which often is tactile, is always on the top side. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 20, 2013 at 11:02
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    \$\begingroup\$ @pilsetnieks, the tactile USB logo is always on the top side of the plug; however, the jack has no logo, and can be oriented any way on a device. \$\endgroup\$
    – Ben Miller
    Commented Aug 20, 2013 at 17:08
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    \$\begingroup\$ Or better would be to make the plug and socket completely symmetric so it doesn't matter which way you plug it in, which is what the upcoming Type-C connector is meant to address. \$\endgroup\$
    – jamesdlin
    Commented Jul 26, 2014 at 1:00
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    \$\begingroup\$ @pilsetnieks The USB logo on a blackberry cable is both tactile and on the bottom side. What you mentioned used to be natural for me, but ever since I got one of those, I'm in perpetual confusion. Standards only work when everybody follows them \$\endgroup\$
    – neelsg
    Commented Apr 20, 2015 at 10:44
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    \$\begingroup\$ To comment on the flag: as a 4-year-old answer, I'm voting to let this remain even though it doesn't completely address the answer. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Sep 11, 2016 at 15:18
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It is even smaller. With devices packing in more and more, the connector is one way to save. And they probably thought it was better to have fewer choices.

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Aside from being smaller, the Micro USB connector latches positively when connected, making it much less prone to failure when the cable is wiggled in the port. In other words, unlike the Mini USB connector which could slip out if wiggled in the port, Micro USB holds the connector captive in the port with two latches at the male end, so that even if the port and cable connection is loose, electrical connectivity can be reliably maintained.

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    \$\begingroup\$ In theory perhaps, in practice they are far, far, far less reliable than mini USB connectors were, with the failure typically showing up first as an unreliable connection... \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jul 25, 2016 at 3:29

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