The I/O ports are mainly used for, connections and other electrical things of that nature sound, recording, looking at things, reading devices
There is only two types of I O ports. The two ports is a USB and serial.
I/O ports, short for Input/Output ports, are physical interfaces on a computer or device that allow the exchange of data with external devices. These ports can be used for connecting peripherals such as keyboards, mice, printers, and storage devices to a computer. There are different types of I/O ports, including USB, HDMI, Ethernet, and audio ports.
Oban.
Standard FTP ports of 20 and 21
Programmed input/output (PIO) is a method of transferring data between the CPU and a peripheral such as a network adapter or an ATA storage device.In general, programmed I/O happens when software running on the CPU uses instructions that access I/O address space to perform data transfers to or from an I/O device. This is contrast to Direct Memory Access (DMA) transfers.The best known example of a PC device that uses programmed I/O is the ATA interface; however, this interface can also be operated in any of several DMA modes. Many older devices in a PC also use PIO, including legacy serial ports, legacy parallel ports when not in ECP mode, the PS/2 keyboard and mouse ports, legacy MIDI and joystick ports, the interval timer, and older network interfaces.
IRQ and I/O
TCP ports can range from 0 to 65535. The well-known ports, which range from 0 to 1023, are typically reserved for specific services (e.g., HTTP uses port 80, HTTPS uses port 443). Ports ranging from 1024 to 49151 are known as registered ports and can be used by user applications. Ports from 49152 to 65535 are dynamic or private ports and are usually assigned temporarily for client source ports during communication.
These interface products turn regular USB ports into ports for serial products that can be connected to other serial components for communication uses.
Ports are any cable or device connection point designed to plug in peripherals etc. into the computer. They are commonly known as i/o ports (input/ output). Connectors are the same thing.
do you mean "motherboard I/O ports"? Eg. USB, PS/2, Serial, Parallel...
well, theres importing, exporting, and port-o-potties.
dns