Sure, the mobility of having them when you need them instead of taking up room or battery usage when they are installed in your computer. The laptops can be made smaller, lighter, thinner and the battery's can have a longer life.
Not to mention if the peripheral, like a DVD drive, were to fail you would have to send the laptop in to a repair shop or you would have to disassemble the laptop to replace it.
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true you fkr
Yes, you can connect peripherals to a laptop using various ports and interfaces such as USB, HDMI, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi. Common peripherals include keyboards, mice, printers, external drives, and displays. Depending on the laptop's specifications, you may need adapters or docking stations for compatibility with certain devices. Always ensure that the necessary drivers are installed for optimal functionality.
Yes, it is possible to connect peripherals to a laptop using various ports and interfaces, such as USB, HDMI, and Bluetooth. Common peripherals include keyboards, mice, printers, external monitors, and storage devices. Most laptops come equipped with multiple ports to accommodate these connections, and wireless options like Bluetooth allow for further flexibility. Additionally, docking stations can provide expanded connectivity for multiple peripherals.
Peripherals, such as the keyboard, mouse, monitor, external hard-drive, scanner, printer, and so on, are connected to the main device - which is a computer (desktop, laptop, netbook, etc).
Peripherals, such as the keyboard, mouse, monitor, external hard-drive, scanner, printer, and so on, are connected to the main device - which is a computer (desktop, laptop, netbook, etc
Sure, the mobility of having them when you need them instead of taking up room or battery usage when they are installed in your computer. The laptops can be made smaller, lighter, thinner and the battery's can have a longer life.Not to mention if the peripheral, like a DVD drive, were to fail you would have to send the laptop in to a repair shop or you would have to disassemble the laptop to replace it.
Port replicator. A port replicator makes it convenient to connect a notebook computer to resources and peripherals at your office. A docking station can provide extra secondary storage for a laptop.
No. 1394 is firewire. You don't need 1394 / firewire to connect to a wireless connection.However, considering I havn't seen firewire on a laptop for awhile now Im going to assume you are on a desktop..?!?If this is the case, desktops don't natively connect to wireless connections (say the way a laptop would) so usually you have to hook up some sort of extra device. Any external devices I have seen were all USB, but if you were using an external device that connected to the computer via firewire - then yes you would need the firewire enabled. But again, in saying that, if firewire wasnt enabled and you plugged in your device it wouldn't work at all - in any way, shape or form.Enabling firewire isn't hard either. Usually takes all of 3 minutes to do. You could just enable it anyway, incase you need to use it in future.
You will need a firewire cable. A firewire cable is hardware that allows a user to transfer data, run analysis or run software on one hard drive from another computer. A firewire cable as its first debut was almost worth a hundred dollars. But now you can find a deciet one for about sixty dollars. Be careful when you do connect to the hard drive. If you are trying to diagnose a problem like a malware infection, the infection could also infect your pc.
It turns your laptop into an external firewire drive. You can connect it to a computer via firewire 400 or 800 and it will appear on that computer's desktop. If you get a new Mac you can use Target Disk Mode to quickly copy your stuff from the old Mac to the new Mac. (See links below)
firewire and usb