High Density Interconnect (HDI-30)

Apple Macintosh laptops used a squarish external SCSISmall Computer System Interface (SCSI) Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) is a set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices, best known for it's use with storage devices such as hard disk drives. SCSI was introduced in the 1980s and has seen widespread use on servers and high-end workstations, with new SCSI standards being published as recently as SAS-4 in 2017. Read more on Wikipedia connector called an HDI-30High Density Interconnect (HDI-30) Apple Macintosh laptops used a squarish external SCSI connector called an HDI-30 (High Density Interconnect) on the laptop itself (not on the peripheral end of the cable, unless two laptops were being connected). These machines also had the interesting ability to become "SCSI slaves" (officially known as "SCSI Disk Mode" in Apple documentation), meaning that they could appear to be disk drives when attached to another computer's SCSI controller (a feature later reimplemented over FireWire and Thunderbolt for later, non-SCSI Mac hardware). Read more on Wikipedia (High Density Interconnect) on the laptop itself (not on the peripheral end of the cable, unless two laptops were being connected). These machines also had the interesting ability to become “SCSI slaves” (officially known as “SCSI Disk Mode” in Apple documentation), meaning that they could appear to be disk drives when attached to another computer’s SCSI controller (a feature later reimplemented over FireWireIEEE1394 FireWire IEEE 1394 is an interface standard for a serial bus for high-speed communications and isochronous real-time data transfer. It was developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Apple in cooperation with a number of companies, primarily Sony and Panasonic. It is most commonly known by the name FireWire (Apple), though other brand names exist such as i.LINK (Sony) and Lynx (Texas Instruments). Read more on Wikipedia and Thunderbolt for later, non-SCSI Mac hardware).

Read more on Wikipedia