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June 15, 2010 Mac Mini Unibody (Mid 2010) Mac Mini: July 20, 2011 Mac Mini Unibody Server (Mid 2010) Mac Mini: July 20, 2011 July 27, 2010 iMac Unibody (Mid 2010) iMac: May 3, 2011 August 9, 2010 Mac Pro Tower (Mid 2010) Mac Pro: June 11, 2012 October 20, 2010 MacBook Air Tapered Unibody (Late 2010) MacBook Air: July 20, 2011 2011 February 24, 2011
Micro-USB connectors, which were announced by the USB-IF on January 4, 2007, [15] [16] have a similar width to Mini-USB, but approximately half the thickness, enabling their integration into thinner portable devices. The Micro-A connector is 6.85 by 1.8 mm (0.270 by 0.071 in) with a maximum overmold boot size of 11.7 by 8.5 mm (0.46 by 0.33 in ...
Examples of computer connector sockets on various laptops Ports on the back of the Apple Mac Mini (2005) A computer port is a hardware piece on a computer where an electrical connector can be plugged to link the device to external devices, such as another computer, a peripheral device or network equipment. [1] This is a non-standard term.
Mac Pro (Early 2008) Mac Pro: March 3, 2009 January 15, 2008 MacBook Air (Early 2008) MacBook Air: October 14, 2008 USB SuperDrive (previously MacBook Air SuperDrive) Drives: current [a] February 5, 2008 iPhone (1st generation) (16 GB) iPhone: July 11, 2008 February 26, 2008 MacBook (Early 2008) MacBook: October 14, 2008 MacBook Pro (Early 2008 ...
USB device communication is based on pipes (logical channels). A pipe connects the host controller to a logical entity within a device, called an endpoint. Because pipes correspond to endpoints, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably. Each USB device can have up to 32 endpoints (16 in and 16 out), though it is rare to have so many ...
The M3 Pro has a 192-bit memory bus where the M1 and M2 Pro had a 256-bit bus, resulting in only 150 GB/sec bandwidth versus 200 GB/sec for its predecessors. The 14-core M3 Max only enables 24 out of the 32 controllers, therefore it has 300 GB/sec vs. the 400 GB/sec for all models of the M1 and M2 Max, while the 16-core M3 Max has the same 400 ...
The 12-inch Retina MacBook (early 2015) has only one expansion port, a USB-C port that supports charging, external displays, and Target Disk Mode. Using Target Disk Mode on this MacBook requires a cable that supports USB 3.0 or USB 3.1, with either a USB-A or USB-C connector on one end and a USB-C connector on the other end for the MacBook. [5]
The Macintosh Plus was the last classic Mac to have an RJ11 port on the front of the unit for the keyboard, as well as the DE-9 connector for the mouse; models released after the Macintosh Plus would use ADB ports. The Mac Plus was the first Apple computer to utilize user-upgradable SIMM memory modules instead of single DIP DRAM chips. Four ...