I use a very old laptop which only has USB 1.1 ports built into the motherboard. In order to use cameras, external drives and printers, I have always put a PCMCIA expansion card in my computer that provides two USB 2.0 ports. The PCMCIA bus is based on PCI, so it supports transfer speeds of 1Gbps... more than enough for the 480Mbps of the USB 2.0 standard.
There's a card called "Inside Hide" made by AKE and its design appealed to me. You can see that this card is much shorter.
However, if the casing is bendable, it can bend enough to create large gaps on both sides of the prong. The AKE PCMCIA card has a very small height. This means the casing on top of the USB ports has to be very thin. It is made of bendable aluminium and this allows one to misinsert a USB device without much forcing.
This is what happened to me. I wanted to plug in my printer, so without thinking, I jammed the USB cable into the port and powered on the printer. Something happened to the card and the Linux kernel did not like this so my computer froze. When I removed the card, everything unfroze. When I plugged the card back in, everything froze again. I bricked the expansion card that I had been using for less than a week!
To ensure that my heavy-handedness did not cause a short circuit, I opened up the case and examined the inside of the card. When I inserted the card after doing this nothing happened. It didn't freeze my system but it also wasn't recognized as a USB hub at all. I figured that this is because the case is required to complete some circuit. The strip with the 8 bumps (it has a gold stripe on one of the cards above) is a grounding strip. Without that, I guess there is no other ground and nothing works. So I put the case back on, but the card still went undetected after this. When I broke the seal initially, I must've caused some irreversible damage. So I threw the card in the garbage. After all, it's only $5!
I ordered two more AKE cards in case I break one and so far they are doing well. If anyone reading this is old school enough to still need a card like this, be careful that you don't make the same mistake!