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The HD Audio 3.5 mm subminiature audio jack differed from connectors used in the AC'97 specification and in general audio equipment. The AC'97 used a regular 3.5 mm audio jack, which typically has 5 pins: one pin for ground, two pins for stereo signal, and two pins for the return signal.
A phone connector (tip, ring, sleeve) also called an audio jack, phone plug, jack plug, stereo plug, mini-jack, or mini-stereo. This includes the original 6.35 mm (quarter inch) jack and the more recent 3.5 mm (miniature or 1/8 inch) and 2.5 mm (subminiature) jacks, both mono and stereo versions. There also exists 4.4 mm Pentaconn connectors.
3.5 mm minijack Arrow going into a circle Lime: 577 C Analog line level audio output for the main stereo signal (front speakers or headphones) Output 3.5 mm minijack Arrow going out one side of a circle into a wave Orange: 157 C Analog line level audio output for center channel speaker and subwoofer: Output 3.5 mm minijack Black
Audio Input 1 (stereo 3.5mm miniature jack) Audio Input 2 (stereo 3.5mm miniature jack, in front-panel) Audio Output (RCA jack L,R) Headphone Output (stereo 3.5mm miniature jack, in front-panel) Dimensions are 168 (w) x 203 (d) x 35 (h) mm and weight 0.5 kg. [1] Power requirements: draws 300 mA of current at 9 volts.
JACK can be used with ALSA, PortAudio, CoreAudio, FFADO and OSS as hardware back-ends. Additionally, a dummy driver (useful if no sound output is desired, e.g. for offline rendering) and an Audio-over-UDP driver exist. One or both implementations can run on Linux, macOS, Solaris, Windows, iOS, FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD.
A 3.5 mm phone connector A 3.5 mm 4-conductor TRRS phone connector A 3.5 mm 5-conductor TRRRS phone connector. In the most common arrangement, consistent with the original intention of the design, the male plug is connected to a cable, and the female socket is mounted in a piece of equipment.
3.5 mm or 3.5mm may refer to: HO scale , in rail transport modelling, 1:87 scale, with rails 16.5 mm apart, representing standard gauge 3.5 mm jack , used on audio and mobile telephony equipment
The W995 was introduced February 2009 and released on 4 June 2009 and uses the 4th version of the 'Walkman Player'. It is also the first Walkman phone to feature a standard 3.5 mm headset jack rather than requiring a FastPort connection. It features an 8.1-megapixel camera which seems similar to the C905.