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Peripheral Connectors

The following photograph shows the typical peripheral connectors on an ATX motherboard.


In older computers (with PC, XT, or AT motherboards), the serial port and parallel port were typically on an expansion card along with two IDE (later called ATA) hard drive ports and one floppy drive port. These expansion cards were called multi-I/O or super-I/O cards. With the advent of the ATX motherboard, these ports were moved to the motherboard supported by a Super-I/O chip. The PS/2-style mouse and keyboard interfaces (with the six-pin miniature DIN connectors) were added to ATX motherboards.[1]

The mouse, keyboard, serial port, and parallel port connectors are obsolete and not used on modern motherboards. These have all been superseded by USB versions of the devices. The serial and parallel ports are still supported on many motherboards but exist only as header connectors (the familiar two-row gold pin connectors used for many devices). Cables and external connectors must be added to bring these out of the case. Six or more USB connectors are becoming common. Other connectors you may find in this cluster are found below.

FireWire

Firewire, also called IEEE 1394, iLink, i.LINK and Lynx is a high-speed serial bus that competes with USB and is also a standard audio/visual (A/V) connection interface. It is available in wired, wireless, fiber optic, and coaxial versions.

FireWire

The standard six-conductor FireWire connector is shown above. Still, the wired version may also use a small four-conductor connector or RJ-45 connector with a Cat-5e cable, making the cable look like an Ethernet cable.

eSATA

The eSATA socket is for the external connection of mass storage devices using the SATA (Serial ATA) protocol. All eSATA devices require external power separate from the eSATA cable. The cable and connector are more robust, certified for 5000 insertions and removals compared to SATA, which only has certification for 50. eSATA is incompatible with SATA.

eSATA Connectors

DVI

Digital Visual Interface (DVI) was developed as an industry standard to transfer video content. There are several arrangements of the DVI connector that support single links, dual links, analog video, USB, etc. DVI-I supports digital and analog links, DVI-D only supports digital links, and DVI-A only supports analog ones. You can get DVI to VGA adapters for DVI cards that support analog video.

DVI Connector Types

DMS-59

DMS-59 (Dual Monitor Solution, 59 pins) provides two DVI or VGA outputs in a single connector. A split breakout cable is required that has two DVI or VGA connectors.

A DMS-59 connector on an expansion card

A DMS-59 connector on an expansion card and DMS-59 to VGA breakout cable

A DMS-59 to VGA breakout cable

HDMI

High Definition Media Interface is an all-in-one solution for computer I/O. The standard calls for DVI video, HD Audio, and Gigabit Ethernet capabilities in a single cable. It was developed for 'smart' TVs requiring an internet connection, but at least some cables do not have this capability. The most common use is plugging computer or cable box video into TVs.

An HDMI Connector

DisplayPort

DisplayPort is a new video standard designed to complement HDMI. The video bandwidth has several high-capacity channels that allow the video stream to daisy-chain through ten devices and treat each as an independent display.

A DisplayPort Connector

S/PDIF

The Sony/Phillips Digital Interconnect Format is a data transfer protocol used for digital audio. There are both electrical and optical ports that use the S/PDIF protocol. The electrical S/PDIF port is a regular RCA (phono) connector. It is color-coded yellow, so don't confuse it with composite video.

An Optical S/PDIF plug

 

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1The PS/2 mouse and keyboard connectors were identical but incompatible. Later motherboards color codded the connectors to aid plugging the devices into the correct connectors. Some motherboards had a single connector for both the keyboard and mouse (half purple and half green). The circuitry worked with either device. A splitter cable was used to use both devices with the one connector.
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