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Thats what keep engineers in jobs though, if they used all the normal names consumers wouldn't get confused and call helpdesk and need an engineer to come out.
Actually I are an engineer, but when I last used a connector that big it was called a D-type. Now nothing that I work on has connectors that big. Big connectors are for consumer products and assuming that a consumer knows the engineering name for an item is silly.
If you are using a USB dongle ignore the instructions to attach the parallel port dongle and click 'OK' to continue.
Please click OK when you have attached the Dongle device to the parallel port on your computer.
Pins on device mate with holes in computer's DB25 socket connector.
<OK><Cancel>
Part of my job is to take instructions like that and turn them into something that human beings can use. I seem to have more and more of this to do recently.
It is actually quite fun, especially when 100 words of irrelevant bollocks can be distilled down to: Click OK.
If you are using a USB dongle ignore the instructions to attach the parallel port dongle and click 'OK' to continue.
Please click OK when you have attached the Dongle device to the parallel port on your computer.
Pins on device mate with holes in computer's DB25 socket connector.
<OK><Cancel>
Hmmmm, how interesting, and how does that make you feel?
If you are using a USB dongle ignore the instructions to attach the parallel port dongle and click 'OK' to continue.
Please click OK when you have attached the Dongle device to the parallel port on your computer.
Pins on device mate with holes in computer's DB25 socket connector.
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