Editing Talk:2317: Pinouts

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:AFAIK FireWire allows many-to-many communication, while USB never did. The FireWire tribute pin could be a way to establish many-to-many communication. Alternatively, FireWire allows daisy-chaining, while USB supports only a tree network trough hubs. The FireWire pin could be somehow physically strange, so a second USB-C cable could be connected to it. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.89.193|162.158.89.193]] 08:22, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
 
:AFAIK FireWire allows many-to-many communication, while USB never did. The FireWire tribute pin could be a way to establish many-to-many communication. Alternatively, FireWire allows daisy-chaining, while USB supports only a tree network trough hubs. The FireWire pin could be somehow physically strange, so a second USB-C cable could be connected to it. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.89.193|162.158.89.193]] 08:22, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  
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The "FireWire tribute pin" bit actually probably was intended to be about the 110V pin.  Providing 110V is, of course, absurd, but FireWire was (I think) the first computer bus to use a relatively high bus voltage to send lots of power over the wire.  The spec actually requires hardware to handle up to 30 VDC.  In fact, I once heard lore about an early prototype PowerMac G4 (I think) that was nicknamed "FireBurner".  Apple built it at one point in the distant past, and actually provided 30V worth of bus power.  They didn't ship that configuration to the public as far as I know, but they used to make it available to companies who wanted to test their FireWire hardware for compatibility.  Unfortunately, a lot of hardware manufacturers in the early days didn't pay attention to that 30V number and assumed that the hardware would always provide 12V like the Macs that had shipped up to that point.  When they actually encountered 30V, a lot of those early devices didn't survive.  [[User:Dgatwood|Dgatwood]] ([[User talk:Dgatwood|talk]]) 19:49, 6 August 2020 (UTC)
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The "FireWire tribute pin" bit actually probably was intended to be about the 110V pin.  Providing 110V is, of course, absurd, but FireWire was the first computer bus to use a high bus voltage to send lots of current.  The spec actually requires hardware to handle up to 30 VDC.  In fact, I once heard lore about an early prototype PowerMac G4 (I think) that was nicknamed "FireBurner".  Apple built it at one point in the distant past, and actually provided 30V worth of bus power.  They didn't ship that configuration to the public as far as I know, but they used to make it available to companies who wanted to test their FireWire hardware for compatibility.  Unfortunately, a lot of hardware manufacturers in the early days didn't pay attention to that 30V number and assumed that the hardware would always provide 12V like the Macs that had shipped up to that point.  When they actually encountered 30V, a lot of those early devices didn't survive.  [[User:Dgatwood|Dgatwood]] ([[User talk:Dgatwood|talk]]) 19:49, 6 August 2020 (UTC)
  
 
Added a little more description to the coax cable section, just in case it wasn't obvious to a layman what an example of the cable would be or why it was included with a cartoon about digital data cables.--[[Special:Contributions/172.69.68.195|172.69.68.195]] 22:46, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
 
Added a little more description to the coax cable section, just in case it wasn't obvious to a layman what an example of the cable would be or why it was included with a cartoon about digital data cables.--[[Special:Contributions/172.69.68.195|172.69.68.195]] 22:46, 10 June 2020 (UTC)

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