yeah this RAM module uses a 44-pin (2mm pitch?) connector.
That's great if you want it to be possible to accidentally plug your hard drive into your RAM slot or vice versa! Normally that's not remotely possible for so many reasons.
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yeah this RAM module uses a 44-pin (2mm pitch?) connector. That's great if you want it to be possible to accidentally plug your hard drive into your RAM slot or vice versa! Normally that's not remotely possible for so many reasons. 17 comments
THE PINOUT IS FOR THE POWER CABLE NOT THE POWER CONNECTOR ON THE LAPTOP meaning: yeah, I borrowed someone who has... nosmia? Whatever the term for "has a sense of smell" is. It's got Magic Smoke Stank now. Pulled everything out. It's a small computer! This is everything but the keyboard, hard drive, floppy drive, and screen. apparently instead of having a "POWER GOOD" pin like ATX PSUs do, they went for the opposite, where they have a pin that tells you if the power is sus *amongus noise* someday when I have money again I'm getting me an inspection microscope with HDMI out so I can do better close-up pictures of these things. Do they make smelloscopes? wait ZOOM, ENHANCE! I don't think it's supposed to look like that (Amusingly, I'm listening to Well There's Your Problem in another tab) the question is: what the fuck is this thing? the label has been sadly... exploded. I think it's either a MOSFET or a very small voltage regulator? @foone I came here to ask if anywhere it specified which view that pin out was 😅 @foone This is why I usually connect ground to the shield of a DB connector. Still not foolproof |
I seriously can't think of any era of PC hardware where that was even remotely possible, for physical connector reasons.
You could use the same connector for both RAM and hard drives back in the early PC era with HardCards and RAM upgrade ISA cards, but that wasn't really a case of mixing up the connectors: they just both plugged in the same generic place.