On my Dell, not only are the ports upside down, they are set at an upward angle. To get to them there is a door that swings upward. To plug anything in to my USB ports I pretty much have to get on my knees on the floor.
Just saying that I don’t think I’d ever notice if my USB ports were rightside up, upside down, or sideways. I almost always use a USB cable between the port on the computer and the device so I can put the device somewhere convenient. The only thing I’ve ever plugged directly into the port is a USB hardware key or a RAM drive, neither of which have an “up” to make me care about the orientation.
Actually, that makes a lot of sense. If you have an oddly shaped device you need to plug in, there’s a chance that you don’t have room - by switching the up and down, you double your chances of being able to plug it in (or you could just get a cord…).
I have Dell desktops at home and work, and both CPUs are kept next to their respective monitors on their respective desks. I find it much easier to access everything – including the front USB ports – that way. I don’t remember the last time I kept a CPU on the floor.
There are many of us who choose to keep our CPUs on the floor for any number of reasons. Surely Dell knows that. Even if I kept it on my desk, the USB ports would be awkward to get to. Even after you lift up the access panel and look straight on, the ports are not visible. They are at the bottom of a rectangular bulge. It is such an idiotic placement I have to believe there is a reason for it. Dell isn’t stupid.
PCI cards are inherently upside-down; the circuitry on the card always faces down. This may well be to prevent dust from settling on the components, but it may also be because older computers often had combined PCI and ISA slots (and a few still do). An ISA card would be inserted components-up, with the connector at the bottom edge of the slot; a PCI card would be inserted components-down with the connector at the top edge of the slot.
Because of this, connectors on PCI cards are usually upside-down. It’s often difficult to tell, but compare the way your modem/network ports are configured (usually prong-up on a PCI modem or Ethernet card) with a wall jack (usually prong-down). Also, the narrow side of D-shaped connectors (serial ports, parallel ports, analog monitor connectors, game ports) is usually at the top of a PCI card. If you look at the connectors for these (look for a symbol or pin numbers on the female connector), this is upside-down.
Some connectors on PCI cards aren’t upside-down, but most are. On a notebook, the connectors may or may not be upside-down depending on how the notebook is constructed internally. For USB ports, the part with the plastic tab with pins on it is the top (connectors go in this way symbol-side-up). USB ports on a PCI card are usually arranged to be right-side-up but they may not be in a notebook.
Right Way Up Upside Down
+------+ +------+
| ==== | | |
| | | ==== |
+------+ +------+
Where the ==== is, on my machine anyway, the white solid bit (with contacts on it’s underside). Of course I could have it the wrong way roung, but my cables plug in with the USB logo on the upside which normally implies that that side is up.
As to why, I guess it’s to do with how the plugs are cabled. I have and have seen various desktops and laptops that have badly designed/placed USB ports. I think they expected people to be plugging cables into them rather than the various USB gizmos we get nowadays … I’d imagine newer machines will have more spread out and differently organised USB ports.