This article relies largely or entirely on a single source .(January 2022) |
Type | Computer mouse input port | ||
---|---|---|---|
Production history | |||
Designer | Microsoft | ||
Designed | late 1980s | ||
Produced | 1980s to 2000 | ||
Superseded by | PS/2 port, USB (2000 ) | ||
General specifications | |||
External | Yes | ||
Cable | 9 wires plus shield | ||
Pins | 9 | ||
Connector | Mini-DIN-9 | ||
Data | |||
Data signal | 30–200 Hz (interrupt mode) with 3 button state signals and quadrature signals for mouse movement | ||
Pinout | |||
Female port pin layout from the front | |||
Pin 1 | SW2 | Mouse button 2 | |
Pin 2 | SW3 | Mouse button 3 | |
Pin 3 | GND | Ground | |
Pin 4 | XB | X position | |
Pin 5 | YA | Y position | |
Pin 6 | YB | Y position | |
Pin 7 | SW1 | Mouse button 1 | |
Pin 8 | Vcc | +5 V Power | |
Pin 9 | XA | X position | |
XA/XB and YA/YB indicate movement and direction based on quadrature phase. |
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[…] The original Mouse Systems Bus Mouse is a normal serial 8250 compatible mouse using the normal Mouse Systems serial protocol, however the base address of this 8250 type chip is not one of the usual COM port addresses 3F8h, 2F8h, 3E8h, or 2E8h, but either 238h or 338h. Besides others these addresses are also supported as alternative addresses for serial ports on the German c't UniRAM add-on ISA card. […] Bus mice from other vendors use completely different interfaces, partially residing at the same I/O addresses […]
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