Dell 610 Laptop User Manual


 
49-50 GND N/A Signal ground
51-52 TRMPWR N/A Terminator power
53 RSVD N/A Reserved
54 GND N/A Signal ground
55 ATN I/O SCSI attention
56 GND N/A Signal ground
57 BSY I/O SCSI busy
58 ACK I/O SCSI acknowledge
59 RST I/O SCSI reset
60 MSG I/O SCSI message
61 SEL I/O SCSI select
62 C/D I/O SCSI command/data
63 REQ I/O SCSI request
64 I/O I/O SCSI in/out
65 D8 I/O SCSI data bit 8
66 D9 I/O SCSI data bit 9
67 D10 I/O SCSI data bit 10
68 D11 I/O SCSI data bit 11
Keyboard and Mouse Connectors
Your system uses a Personal System/2 (PS/2)-style keyboard and supports a PS/2-compatible mouse. Cables from both devices
attach to 6-pin miniature Deutsche Industrie Norm (DIN) connectors on the back panel of your computer.
A PS/2-compatible mouse works identically to an industry-standard serial mouse or bus mouse except that it has its own dedicated
connector, which frees up both serial ports and does not require an expansion card. Circuitry inside the mouse detects the
movement of a small ball and relays the direction to the computer.
Mouse driver software can give the mouse priority with the processor by issuing IRQ12 whenever a new mouse movement is
made. The driver software also passes along the mouse data to the application program that is in control.
Keyboard Connector
If you reconfigure your hardware, you may need pin number and signal information for the keyboard connector. Figure B-6
illustrates the pin numbers for the keyboard connector, and Table B-6 lists and defines the pin assignments and interface signals
for the keyboard connector.