I guess so on the connector, however I think it's unnecessarily confusing.Can't stress this enough: e-v-e-r-y retro Mac collector needs a good multisync display as one of the basics in their kit.
They're easier to find and cost a lot less than a decent video card! [ ]
edit: it's a DA-15 connector. DE = 9pins and DB = 25pins HD's another story.
Get an SD2SCSI?Unfortunately, I don't have a hard drive, CD-ROM or OS disk. So I only see a B/W image with a disk icon and question mark.
Got some more shopping. Lol
LOL! I send folks to that page all the time, but it's only a wikipedia article, yet another article there about the VGA Connector says:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-subminiature
DE does not apparently mean 9 pins, it only means a connector size as DE-9 is the connector for a serial port, but a VGA port is DE-15 according to the above page. So I guess it's properly a DA-15 to DE-15 adapter. The same goes for DB presumably except I've only ever seen a DB-25 (external scsi or parallel port).
Which is exactly why I said "DE = 9pins and DB = 25pins HD's another story"DE-15 has been conventionally referred to ambiguously as D-sub 15, incorrectly as DB-15 and often as HD-15 (High Density, to distinguish it from the DE-9 connector used on the older CGA and EGA cards, as well as some early VGA cards,[1] which have the same E shell size but only two rows of pins). The video connector is an "E" size D-sub connector, with 15 pins in three rows, which is the high-density connector version (DE15HD).
I would point out that "only a wikipedia article" is a completely meaningless statement. It is certainly pssoble for it to be completely wrong, but also possible for it to be entirely correct. It's validity is based on what the correctness of what it says, not whether it's from "Wikipedia" or not contrary to the nonsense librarians and others were spreading for a while. The article claims that a company called Cannon was the inventory of the connector type and also devised the naming system.LOL! I send folks to that page all the time, but it's only a wikipedia article, yet another article there about the VGA Connector says:
Commodore Amigas also use a nonstandard 23 pin D-shell for their video output that's usually referred to as "DB-23" despite it, again, not really being a B-size connector shell.The infamous DB-19 that I sourced from China is not really a DB at all, but that's what Apple consistently calls it in its tech docs.