enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: 9 pin to 25 adapter

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Atari joystick port - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atari_joystick_port

    The Atari joystick port used a 9-pin male socket in the host system, and female connectors on the devices. Classic Atari peripherals used a teardrop shaped rounded plug that was easy to grip to make it easier to plug in. Almost all compatible devices used similar physical layouts, often to the point of copying the plug design outright.

  3. D-subminiature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-subminiature

    Because personal computers first used DB-25 connectors for their serial and parallel ports, when the PC serial port began to use 9-pin connectors, they were often labeled as DB-9 instead of DE-9 connectors, due to an ignorance of the fact that B represented a shell size. It is now common to see DE-9 connectors sold as DB-9 connectors.

  4. Null modem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Null_modem

    A null modem adapter. Null modem is a communication method to directly connect two DTEs (computer, terminal, printer, etc.) using an RS-232 serial cable.The name stems from the historical use of RS-232 cables to connect two teleprinter devices or two modems in order to communicate with one another; null modem communication refers to using a crossed-over RS-232 cable to connect the teleprinters ...

  5. List of video connectors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_video_connectors

    1 Mini-DIN 4-pin, 1 Mini-DIN 7-pin, 1 Mini-VGA, 2 BNC, 2 RCA connectors, 8-pin DIN, [4] SCART 21-pin: S-VHS, some laptop computers, analog broadcast video, 1980-1990s home computers including the Commodore 64, C128 and Atari 8-bit computers: The 4-pin mini-DIN that is most common in consumer products today debuted in JVC's 1987 S-VHS. The 7-pin ...

  6. RS-232 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RS-232

    Presence of a 25-pin D-sub connector does not necessarily indicate an RS-232-C compliant interface. For example, on the original IBM PC, a male D-sub was an RS-232-C DTE port (with a non-standard current loop interface on reserved pins), but the female D-sub connector on the same PC model was used for the parallel "Centronics" printer port .

  7. Serial port - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_port

    The 9-pin DE-9 connector has been used by most IBM-compatible PCs since the Serial/Parallel Adapter option for the PC-AT, where the 9-pin connector allowed a serial and parallel port to fit on the same card. [4] This connector has been standardized for RS-232 as TIA-574.

  8. Tube socket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_socket

    Keying by omitting a pin is also used in 8- (subminiature), 10-, and 12-pin tubes (a variant 10-pin form, "Noval+1", is basically a nine-pin socket with an added center contact). As with loctal tubes, the pins of miniature tube are stiff wires protruding through the bottom of the glass envelope which plug directly into the socket.

  9. Game port - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_port

    However, it connected to the computer using two incompatible 7-pin connectors, which were mechanically connected together as part of a larger multi-pin connector on the back of the machine. [11] This eliminated the need for the Y-adapter. [12] Adapters for Atari-style "digital" sticks were also common during this era. [13]

  1. Ads

    related to: 9 pin to 25 adapter