Hey Sup Forums, what are these? (16, 22 & 24)

Hey Sup Forums, what are these? (16, 22 & 24)

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=F5TGWtK70-E
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Not your homework army, you fag

16 is a SATA connector, used in modern hard drives.

22 it's totally the hdmi .22 jack port

22 is FireWire 400 24 is a breakout cable, not sure of the name, seen it used on a lot of electronics and videocards

16 is SATA, 22 is FireWire, 24 is SVideo.

Checked

a bunch of holes man

Legend

Thanks well, based anons
As is suspected

sata, usb a variant and some parallell variant?

Man, S-video was gonna be the next big thing, like hddvd

Op here, what the fuck does 17 works for?

What happened?

You must be 18 to post on this Mongolian basket weaving board

16 looks like a SATA connector - data, not power.

22 is the older Firewire 400.

24 is a "composite" video output on some mid 2000s graphics cards. Usually had s-video among other things like analog RGB outputs if you had the the right cable.

lol, it plays dubstep.

dvi

SATA, Firewire. Svideo

>743327005
Looks like a single pair, so probably RJ11 with a wider socket - aka, your phone line.

It can also have 4 pairs, or 6 pairs as well.

16 is either SATA or n64 video cable., 24 is s-video, 22 i don't know......

youtube.com/watch?v=F5TGWtK70-E

mini display port i think

This

I'm pretty sure that's a DSL broadband port. Not sure on its official name.

24 is difficult to solder, industrial communication cables use that

No the mini dp is directly under the dp in the picture

looks like its for wifi connections or something

The 17

2017, using lol instead of momarkes

I used to lol on AOL with a US Robotics 56k fax modem. I'm not gonna stop now.

...

...

J45

RJ-11

17 is 2-wire RJ-11

It's phone line. For a dial up modem.

Are you fucking 10 years old? Also I like how people are actually replying to this as if they're ace detectives solving a huge mystery.

Sata, firewire, s - video

Computer vaginas

1. AC power
2. VGA female
3. VGA male
4. DVI, Mini DVI, ??, Displayport, Mini Displayport
5. USB A, B, mini B
6. 3.5mm Line In/Out
7. Stereo
8. Micrphone
9. PS/2 mouse
10. PS/2 keyboard
11. RJ45
12. DB25
13. DB9
14 The fuck? Gay DVI?
15. HDMI
16. SATA, ??, ??
17. RJ12
18. ??
19. Mini USB A
20. ??
21. Firewire 600 4 pin
22. Firewire 400 6 pin
23. Firewire 800 9 pin

I never went to school.

Fuck you. Beat my score.

Oh and 24 is S-Video.

2: Serial (DB9)
6 Line In/Out Audio (No preamp)
7 Speaker Out, (amplified)
13: Joystick/Midi
14: Not sure
16: Yes SATA
18: Not sure
19: Micro USB, the one above it is mini
20 SCSI

100%

18 = DVI

20 = Com port

Since op already got an answer I can say that this image is really fucking satisfying

20 is an external SCSI port. The unmarked one above is an internal SCSI port.

Thinking Egyptian stuff from the olden days

Yeah, you're right. I stand corrected.

AAAAH AAAAH AAAAH

>wifi
>cable

>connecting people with knowledge

end me

The numbering on it is infuriating. There is no logic to how ports are grouped. Like, whats up with all the ports between 4 and 15? The third one is DP, not familiar with the other 3, but I'm guessing they are mac-like ports.

Ignore that
Just the idea of a whole lot of ports in one place feels great

The one below 16 is an internal bus connector used on a lot of modular hardware. It isn't a standardized port. The last time I saw one, i was repairing a Dell MD3000 storage array. It was used to connect the iSCSI controller to the bus.
I've also seen the port used to connect redundant power supplies to a chassis.

nigga just say modem and be real for a change

rj45 for you young dicklickers who don't know what a phone really is

That's a list of all the know genders you cis scum

RJ45 is ethernet, RJ11 is telephone.

Yah know, I had the idea to create a private "bus" based network by taking a Wifi router, and hooking it up to a cable that wouldn't hinder the 2.4Ghz signals.

You could take a bunch of non-mobile computers and hook their Wifi cards right to the cable.

No where near as good as Ethernet, but you could use a single line.

its a phone line for dial up

Each connector would introduce noise.

Taking stock devices would require attenuators, as you'd blow the receivers by the output power of a direct cable connection. The more devices you add, the less attenuation you'd need on each device, so it would be horribly complicated.

I don't remember the name of it, but there was an old token ring network that used coax cable, It was a single coax cable with T's and BNC connectors. Each end of the network required attenuators. Depending on how many devices were on the network, you'd have to use specific attenuators.

I remember this shit. No router just a chain of devices connected with coax.

Obviously all the ports on a PC.

Some are Mac only

I figured that the noise wouldn't be such a big deal, but the power output - that's something I didn't even think about. That's a valid point - all of the power for a full router broadcast over the air being forced over a single cable...

I'll probably try it for shits and giggles anyway if I have a bunch of old cards lying around.