No, you need a 1394 firewire Expresscard
1. A bumpy strip on the edge of a CardBus card is designed to prevent a CardBus card from being inserted into the 16-bit PC Card slots.
1. A bumpy strip on the edge of a CardBus card is designed to prevent a CardBus card from being inserted into the 16-bit PC Card slots.
A bumby strip on the edge of the CardBus prevents it from being inserted into the slot.
An ethernet (NIC) card, a wireless card, a bluetooth card, a firewire card, a USB card, a Sata card, a pcicia/cardbus card, etc.
On a desktop, you can simply add a FireWire hub card in PCI format. These are cheap, usually between $10 and $20. On a laptop, you need to purchase a CardBus card. It may be difficult if you are already using a CardBus device, since a FireWire card will probably take up two rows.Actually Windows 2000 is an operating system. Most computers that were preloaded with that OS had at least 2 IEEE 1394 sockets on the back near the USB ports. Seeing that this question is about Windows 2000, it's probably about 8 years old!!!
None. You need a FireWire / IEEE 1394 hub.
ExpressCards are not backwards compatible with CardBus or PC Card
Any Firewire adapter will work great with a dell notebook, as they all have a standard firewire outlet or can use an adapter card.
FireWire (technically known as an IEEE 1394 interface) is an interface developed by Apple that allows you to plug peripherals such as video cameras into your computer. Most Macs come with a FireWire interface, some Windows PCs have fireWire built in or they can have it added by adding a FireWire card. Some manufacturers adopt their own name for the IEEE 1394 interface; Sony, for example, call it an iLink. If you have a camera, or some other peripheral, with a FireWire interface it will have come with a FireWire cable which you plug into your computer to allow the two to connect so you can transfer your video/images from the camera to the computer.
CardBus refers to a type of PC card that was introduced in 1995 and was put into laptops after 1997. CardBus is referred to as a 32-bit, 33 MHz PCI bus in the form of a PC card.
Yes. While not as popular as USB, firewire is still definitely used today. Today, firewire is the dominant way of transferring digital video from a camera to a PC. Update: Yes if you have a free compatible expansion slot (e.g. PCI), your Firewire or 1394 card will still be usable. I recently added a my old PCI Firewire card to one of the new machines. These are used primarily for Video capture/transfer or even for some external HDD or DVD drives which have a Firewire interface. - Neeraj Sharma
CardBus