Food & Drink2 mins ago
What is a Cardbus?
I have found in a drawer a package, which I didn't know I had, which contains an AVerTV Cardbus, complete with all manner of connecting cables, a remote control, but, alas, no user manual.
Research on the internet gives me specs of the device but, naturally I suppose, assumes that I know what it is. But I don't, though I gather that it might be something to do with receiving analogue and digital TV on a laptop...?? Neither can I find a user manual for it.
Can anyone enlighten me, please?
Research on the internet gives me specs of the device but, naturally I suppose, assumes that I know what it is. But I don't, though I gather that it might be something to do with receiving analogue and digital TV on a laptop...?? Neither can I find a user manual for it.
Can anyone enlighten me, please?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by chakka35. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Many moons ago, laptops came with one or two extra sockets. These were called PCMCIA socets, and allowed you to plug in extra devices (of the sort that would usually go into internal slots in a desktop PC). The most common devices were modems, network cards, etc. The later versions were called cardbus, and (I beleive) even later were just called PC cards. It was also possible to buy a device which fitted into your desktop computer so that you could use the same cards in both your laptop and your PC, but that never really caught on.
If you don't have a laptop or PC that has a Cardbus socket, then the device that you've found is just so much obsolete junk.
If you don't have a laptop or PC that has a Cardbus socket, then the device that you've found is just so much obsolete junk.