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USB and FireWire
Usb and firewire
usb and firewire
It would be B. With a keyboard
you can try it, worse case it just wont power it enough. It will not harm the printer in any way, it just might not have enought "juice" to power it.
Case, Power Supply and Motherboard The case must support the form factor of the motherboard, and the motherboard must support the CPU socket type for any given CPU.
generally the green button is power so obviously by hitting that button it will make the printer turn on and get a signal from the computer. If it is a printer/scanner/etc then it is a confirm button. When i print something here it asks on the printer "Are you sure you want to print?" and i hit the green button to confirm i wanted to print that.
It is okay sometimes to use a power supply that allows for more amps than your device. You have a good chance of burning up your converter because the printer wants more amps than the power supply can give. It is okay sometimes to use a power supply that allows for more amps than your device. You have a good chance of burning up your converter because the printer wants more amps than the power supply can give.
When working inside a monitor, inside a power supply or inside another high voltage peripheral such as a laser printer or scanner. The reason is that these components contain a powerful electrical charge even after they are disconnected from power. You don't want to be grounded because you provide yourself as a conduit for the voltage to discharge through, which would suck.
Yes as long as you have a good power supply they have the same interface, PCI-E SLI.
A typical computer system consists of a computer case, a power supply unit, a motherboard, a central processing unit (CPU), main memory, and a hard disk drive. Input devices include a keyboard, mouse, microphone, video camera, and image scanner. Output devices include a monitor, speakers, and a printer.
As in all electronics devices that obtain power from the AC electric system, a power supply converts the AC to the DC voltage(s) needed by the electronics in the device. Depending on the needs of the device this power supply may deliver a single DC voltage or as many as several dozen different DC voltages.