PerogiBoi,
@PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca avatar

Ethernet. Dat click and dat squishy release. Mmmmmmpppphhhhh

Cabrio, (edited )

BNC RG59 twist on, locking coaxial connector. The RG59 form factor is the pinnacle of locking cable connector form factors and should be implemented universally.

barryamelton,

some connectors are designed to break easily. RG59 would not break, the device would break. Hence why one finds in middle connections.

Cabrio,

Yes, some devices are not engineered or manufactured adequately to support the superior form factor that is RG59. Weakness is not permitted.

Nobsi,

My first is RJ45, it’s so clicky.
After that is everything held together by magnets. I bought a cheap magnet microusb cable for charging my headphones. It’s like magsafe but way weaker.

TurnItOff_OnAgain,

Fuck a boot though. When trying to remove a bunch at once they just get in the way.

KaiReeve,

I’m glad that most of the older formats are gone. Screws are cumbersome, USB formats were intentionally varied for profit, and molex would break itself before you could seat it properly.

I love USB-C for its universality and SATA cables are a nice alternative to the old IDE. I wish they’d come up with a better solution to the plastic clips on my Ethernet and PSU cables.

As for my favorite… Maybe 3.5mm? I mean, it’s old as dirt but still super functional. Nice chunky clicks and usually a solid connection. I miss having a 3.5mm port on my phone. It obviously has some drawbacks, but it’s a solid contender.

Dubious_Fart,

Thumb screws are great for a secure connection that holds up, and can be undone at any time, and takes the stress away from the port itself, since the screws support the stress, so you cant screw up the port by accidentally yanking the cable out like you can with HDMI.

USB variants? You mean mini and micro? That was so products could be made smaller and smaller, cause no one wanted a phone that had a USB B slot on it, making the phone an inch thick.

Everyone has different experiences, but in all my years of PC building and repairs, I only ever had 1 problem with a molex connector, and it was cause the pins had corroded together (PC had water damage, was seeing if anything was salvageable.)

3.5mm its old as dirt and functional, but its also flimsy. a bad bump and you can break the connections inside it without breaking it externally… Which is what happened to my last pair of headphones…thankfully they had a replaceable cable.

USB-C is a major pain in the ass. You pick up a random USB-C cable. Okay… is it a charging cable, or does it have data? is it Slow speed or high speed? Does it support thunderbolt? Who knows! Hope you label them and keep them properly separated!

Kelsenellenelvial,

USB-A, USB-B, USB-B Superspeed, mini-USB, micro-USB, micro-USB-Super Speed. Some of those also presented the issue of not having a simple visual indication of whether it was USB 1, 2, or 3. At least with USB-C, the cables should all work, even if you get slower speeds, whereas a USB-B-3 connector wouldn’t fit a USB-B-2 port at all.

The solution to the USB-C mystery cable is to just get a pile of Thunderbolt cables and then you can be sure it’ll handle whatever the attached devices do.

TheBurlapBandit,

XLR cable. Big, chunky, clicky lock.

mp3,
@mp3@lemmy.ca avatar

I like Molex.

Said no one ever.

cccc,

The best thing about Molex is I haven’t had to touch it for a while.

jcarax,

Beats the hell out of IDE.

mp3,
@mp3@lemmy.ca avatar

Some will never know the pain of hitting the outside of their hand on a sharp corner inside a computer case while pulling on one of these.

Chadteeka,

38999, circ mil bayo mount connectors.

Venator,

CCS

markr,

Standard usb connector because despite my having a 50% chance of having it right side up, the first attempt is always upside down.

notun,

So is the second attempt.

CeruleanRuin,
@CeruleanRuin@lemmy.one avatar

I’m convinced that some USB plugs rotate through a fourth spatial dimension.

hsr,
@hsr@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Could also be that they have a spin of ½ so you need to rotate them by 720° to get back to their original orientation.

dekatron,

I like USB-C especially when it clicks.

theolodger,

Love the NL4 connector’s locking system! Most things with a small twist to lock are nice…

WastedJobe,

FUCK yes, so satisfying

WormFood,

I love XLR and mini-XLR. Durable connector, nice locking mechanism, satisfying click. Also very easy to wire yourself.

RoadieRich,

Did you know that XLR is also something of a standard for interchangeable sex machine attachments?

NotACube,

BNC connector, such a satisfying screw and click into place mechanism.

Slackwise,

BNC is the one. No idea how this response is that far down and people are saying stuff like “USB-C”. I guess people have no experience with the wonder that is a BNC connector…

nickajeglin,

Agree. Twist lock always feels easy to do and secure.

Michal,

Garden hose. It has a satisfying click, and it stops water flow while disconnected 🤯

tomcatt360,
@tomcatt360@lemmy.world avatar

Where are you from? Because here in the US, our garden hoses do neither of those things.

bug,

These bad boys are the best thing about gardening in Britain

FippleStone,

This is what’s used in Australia also, but what do they use in the US then, if not the clicky boys?

Wahots,
@Wahots@pawb.social avatar

Nothing, just metal threading M-F connected to a tap usually. Not very satisfying!

Lodespawn,

Ergh english AC plugs are garbage, built in 13A fuse? Fix your damn power network, Australian plugs are easily better.

lotanis,

The fuse thing comes from history but is still good because then each device is fused appropriately for its load. Get a short on a 3A circuit - fail nice and quickly. If you just rely on house wiring your breaker need to be the maximum possible load on the circuit.

That said of all the non UK plugs, the Australian one is up there. US are the worst and schuco (most of Europe) isn’t great.

Lodespawn,

What kind of breakers or RCDs are you using in your house that wont fail on a short?? If your house wiring is to code, then at best the fuse is a waste of time, at worst it might prompt someone with no electrical training to open the plug up to change the fuse.

richneptune,

This will be the comment that starts the war between Britain and Australasia. During the first wave we’ll just drop millions of plugs pin upwards on your streets, there will be severe foot damage on a scale you cannot fathom

Lodespawn,

That tactic might work in the overcrowded ghettos of London but millions of plugs will be an easily dodged hazard in the spacious streets of any Australian city. We await your first free copper delivery!

zebs,

Obligatory Tom Scott video youtu.be/UEfP1OKKz_Q

Lodespawn,

Thanks for posting this, but I have some notes.

His first point is nonsense. The holes are big enough for a screw driver full stop. If I have two screw drivers then I can shock myself. Not only that, its a guaranteed shock because I'm now making a perfect path to earth. Simple fix: dont make the holes big enough for screw drivers. UK plugs are even worse than yankee plugs for this. Aussie plugs fix this problem.

Aussie plugs cover the second problem. The letter nonsense is nonsense. The fuse is dumb, as above, FIX YOUR DAMN HOUSE WIRING. The last bit about your plug falling apart is classic British ideology, stop building things that fall apart.

Its clearly better than EU or yankee plugs, but thats not a great selling point when its still garbage.

frazw, (edited )

What exactly do you think it’s wrong with our wiring ??

Sensing a lot of hostility or Aussie patriotism just because Britain did something well and you don’t want to admit it.

No other plug had the safety features the UK plug when it was designed or now AND the plug is just one part of a whole system. You act like our plug is the only line of defence - newsflash it isn’t.

Any new property has built in RCD and breakers at entry to the property. That means it’s hard to shock yourself regardless of the plug design.

The fuse in the plug is arguably not needed anymore but it’s still a safety feature that could be used in some circumstances, so why take it out? The fuse existed before RCDs and as technology improved so did our electrical safety standards. The fact the fuse is still there doesn’t mean it is the only way. The fact the gate is there doesn’t mean it is the only way. You might guess by the number of safety features in the plug design that electrical safety is taken seriously in this country.

I’d also argue that screwdrivers are unlikely to be the thing that gets jammed in there anyway. Paperclips, toys, letter opener, etc more likely to be in kids hands I’d have thought, the gate makes it not matter what the implement is. Plenty of things are metal and will fit in any electrical socket - except the UK one unless the gate is held open with a second object.

The dexterity and understanding needed to open the gate with one hand and shove a metal object in the live in with the other is high enough that you are probably dealing with old enough children that they will know what happens if you do it. Even if they do, our “damn wiring” requires an RCD at the consumer unit so they’d still be safe.

There are older houses of course which have less safe electrics like a fuse box, but if you are going to judge by decades older standards, then I can do the same and then you still come out worse, because you don’t have RCDs way back when and your wall sockets are unprotected.

P.s. A quick Google tells me Electrocution statistics in both countries are exactly the same when taking population into account. 20 deaths per year in Oz, 70 in UK. Most caused by faulty appliances. 1 in a million chance, in both countries.

Lodespawn,

If the number of electrocutions per capita are the same then it's clear the fuse is doing nothing. The only reason to keep it is if you don't trust your domestic network, specifically the protection systems provided. If they are to code then why waste your manufactures time, and the time and space of your users continuing to require them.

My argument isn't born from patriotism, it's frustratration at years of having to use an inferior product only to have someone claim it's not only great but the best. Well, it's not the best, far from it, but at the end of the day I don't think I'll ever live in the UK again so shrug have fun with your garbage connectors =)

frazw,

Bear in mind that there are very old properties out there maintained by people who don’t care or can’t afford to rewire their house. The fuse remains to protect them not because of trust. Antsy part of my point was that taking one aspect in isolation doesn’t tell the whole story. The Australian plug on its own is not as safe. It is made safe by upstream components.

Thanks I’ll enjoy my garbage plugs.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • asklemmy@lemmy.ml
  • DreamBathrooms
  • magazineikmin
  • hgfsjryuu7
  • everett
  • thenastyranch
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • InstantRegret
  • Durango
  • rosin
  • kavyap
  • tsrsr
  • vwfavf
  • ngwrru68w68
  • tester
  • khanakhh
  • osvaldo12
  • mdbf
  • GTA5RPClips
  • cubers
  • PowerRangers
  • ethstaker
  • cisconetworking
  • normalnudes
  • modclub
  • tacticalgear
  • Leos
  • anitta
  • All magazines