Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

BTW it's a DE-9 not a DB -- the "B" shell is a much larger lozenge with room for 25 pins (of 1960s scale).

The VGA connector is also a E shell, thus DE-15.

Of course, as you probably remember well, usually we'd only wire up three wires, but nobody called them DE-3!



Hmm, I dunno:

https://www.eltima.com/article/9-pin-serial-port.html

We had DB9 and DB25 offices. Eventually it all became Ethernet, and the coax era began ..


The very first sentence of that link says just what I said: "The RS232C DE-9, often mistakenly referred to as a DB-9..."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-subminiature

If you were doing this during the Ethernet transition (to thinnet) you probably remember the AUIs also had DE connectors though I don't remember how many pins -- perhaps a dozen.


Yeah, I totally grok the fastidious corrective path upon which you sit, its just .. as a person .. I know absolutely nobody who used the proper terminology for these things, we'd also often just call them a "9'er" (DE9) or a "chunky" (DB25), which could be a cunt or a fuck, depending on sex.

Especially, rather late at night, deeply embedded in the A/C ducts and 'services tunnels' of the various hospitals, skyscrapers and other locations of this particular company, for whom I rashed my knuckles, bent my noggin', thrashed the chiclets and hacked mad code for long enough to know, that as long as someone else knows what you mean, it doesn't matter what word you use... as long as they fucking don't drop the thing into the abyss before you can embed burn tracks in your flesh and get it secured in place, to be left for the next damn junior fool who dons the overalls and climbs into the hell of it all, to upgrade things.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: