19
50 pins.
50 pins.
DVI - Digital Video interface has 29 pins
It has 40 Pins
Dvi stands for Digital Visual Interface. as the name suggests, it supports a digital signal. It looks like a long plug about 3cm wide and about a cm thick and has many pins, IT DOES NOT SEND AUDIO, you will need another plug for that. That is why its so widely used for computer monitors that do not have speakers. HDMI on the other hand, Stands for High-Definition Multimedia Interface. It too supports digital signal as well as audio signals. There are quite a few different types of HDMI and DVI cables so make sure you do you know the difference before you buy one. :)
EIDE cable uses a 40-pin connector at the end of the cable to interface with the drive.
The beauty of SCSI is that supports many physical interfaces. Fibre channel SCSI uses 4 "pins" which can be copper, or fibre optic cabling. Parallel scsi which you are probably asking about can use 25, 50 or 68 pins. So you should rephrase your question to specify the interface you are asking about ... but I guess that would liook kinda dumb, ... "How many pins does a 50-pin SCSI interface have" :)
The Garmin eTrex uses a USB cable in order to connect to your desktop, laptop or other device. There are no pins in the USB cable and no other interface is available on most models.
it depends on the cpu. I program microcontrollers that have as few as 8 pins, cpu's on motherboards have many more as they are required to interface with external devices such as memory busses. usually in excess of 200. more modern processors don't have pins, they have contact points which meet contact points on the mainboard. pins are a relative point of discussion but not necessarily factual.
How many pins are there in 4 quarts
A scart cable is a European interface. It uses rectangular connectors with 21 pins and has been the standard video interface between players and monitors for many years. It carries video (composite, YC, component or RGB), stereo audio and control lines and provides a two way interface. It is fully analogue and is being used less as HDMI becomes the standard interface.
1. system lines 2. address and data lines. 3. interface control lines or pins. 4. arbitration lines or pins. 5. Error lines or pins