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Sonic840 — Computer Hardware Chart 2.0 by-nc-sa

#computerart #hardware #wallchart
Published: 2016-01-31 18:45:28 +0000 UTC; Views: 190798; Favourites: 377; Downloads: 18336
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Description

7 years after the last published version, an update to Computer Hardware Chart is finally here!

Measuring in at 7200 × 9600 @ 200ppi (30" x 40" ARCH-E), CHC v2 has 75 CPU sockets/slots, 30 peripheral card slots, 17 internal disk drive interfaces, 57 peripheral ports, 44 kinds of RAM and more.

As before, I'm providing a high-res version for download for those with the means to print themselves for personal use or who want to keep the digital file for easy viewing. Please do not sell this image! The only site permitted to sell prints is currently DeviantArt. If you find it for sale elsewhere, it's not from me. 


300DPI version (exceeds DA's limit for image uploads so this is on sta.sh in a .zip...):

(re-uploaded to sta.sh to fix broken link issues 2021/09/15): sta.sh/0kh6ps5nn6b

Big thanks to the folks who proofed the draft of CHC 2.0 and who purchased prints of version 1.7 from DeviantArt!  The funds from those sales helped me acquire some of the hardware for version 2.0. 

Computer hardware chart was developed to help folks visually tell the difference between the plethora of computer interfaces developed over the years. This chart is geared toward consumer computes, however I've included some server and enterprise components. Version 1 was a project I developed in College. At the time, I had a rich supply of old hardware from my personal collection and availability to newer hardware from my job at the time. The professors I had in my provided support, feedback,  and a plotter to ditto off copies for class. After I graduated and changed jobs, I lost easy access to new hardware and progress was stopped. CHC version 1.8 (a special version commissioned for for a McGraw-Hill book) of the poster outgrew the parent program I developed it in (Photoshop CS3) and I began the process of moving to Illustrator CC in stead. This allowed me to preserve the original individual photos and allow for a very detailed final product. This necessitated the complete re-shoot of the majority of the photos in version 1.x. Each individual photo was taken with my trusty PowerShot 630 at 8Mpx. This little camera has been through a lot. Including a complete lens replacement because of a rather destructive accident, and being too close to an exploding firework which left it badly dented. I have newer cameras, but I really don't like the current generation of CCDs in budget camera, and they have not been able to beat the macro on my Powershot 630. 

The sources for the bits in CHC came from several sources. the majority was out of my personal hardware collection. I've been collecting vintage Macs for years and have built up a pretty large collection. For stuff I did not have on-hand I was able to photograph hardware from my work or from friends. Other hardware has been acquired from online resellers like eBay, Alibaba, and mouser. On rare occasion, google images were used for non-released hardware to impossible to get hardware (like XDIMM and XDR. Essentially all the fuzzy ones...). 


Intentional omissions: Custom USB ports from devices like cell phones, telecom CPU sockets, high-end server CPU sockets (IBM power series, most SUN Sparc, and DEC CPUs), custom or one-off connectors, backplane connectors, uncommon sub-D or DIN interfaces, laptop dock connectors, laptop power ports, CPU voltage card ports, and stuff I don't know about.  


The future of CHC. I think I've exhausted the reasonable space available in a traditional wall chart. Even in version 2.0, the text and individual objects are getting pretty small. I would love to covet this to an iOS app. I am not a programmer... but would really appreciate if I could get a template Xcode project where I could plug in image resources and descriptions to get me started. 

I hope you enjoy this item, Thank you!

-Sonic84



Did you find an inaccuracy or type-o? Mention it in the comments!


Related content
Comments: 58

RogerS1996 [2023-05-21 22:25:41 +0000 UTC]

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Grinderas [2022-12-16 17:55:47 +0000 UTC]

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ep260 [2022-07-20 22:02:32 +0000 UTC]

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mike010100 [2022-04-26 23:34:19 +0000 UTC]

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nihaozz [2022-02-23 17:18:39 +0000 UTC]

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cemorotti [2021-10-28 19:01:52 +0000 UTC]

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DocSavage6 [2021-10-08 20:43:44 +0000 UTC]

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Alsonjecs [2021-08-29 12:44:35 +0000 UTC]

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shaikhtechpro [2021-06-08 09:52:45 +0000 UTC]

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bukuiri [2021-01-06 15:22:05 +0000 UTC]

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ArielJGS [2020-08-12 04:51:56 +0000 UTC]

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rendawg87 [2020-07-27 05:00:18 +0000 UTC]

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TheRealDrYaYa [2020-02-17 10:28:34 +0000 UTC]

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NULUSIOS [2020-01-21 00:27:31 +0000 UTC]

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aleinss [2020-01-07 03:07:08 +0000 UTC]

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garasama04 [2019-07-12 12:00:54 +0000 UTC]

thanks so much

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cjdavis618 [2019-05-27 21:52:49 +0000 UTC]

Hi, I just downloaded version 2.0 and wanted to point out that the IDE PATA 40 pin hard drive connector is actually another 50pin scsi connector on the image. The PATA should have a Master/Slave/Cable Select jumper option.

Awesome compilation though. Thanks!

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Gamerz31w [2019-02-21 17:15:32 +0000 UTC]

Is it some sort of catalog?

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Roachy1 [2019-02-14 22:54:22 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for this. It's a beautiful labor of love.

Extra thanks for releasing the full gigantic 300 DPI source image. We printed it out on our poster printer for our helpdesks, and it's even better in its full 36" x 48" physical glory  Sorry we don't have the budget to buy the print. Once I figure out how DA donations/points work I'll buy you a beer.

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DylanDonohue [2018-11-19 20:18:55 +0000 UTC]

No more VGA?
Also, don't know if you want to include KVM in as well.

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Sonic840 In reply to DylanDonohue [2018-11-23 02:11:46 +0000 UTC]

it's there
4rd row, 2nd from the end. it's just not the blue version of the DE-15 port. 

KVM (keyboard Video Mouse) is more of a category of devices, not really a specific port.
Many KVM use common video ports. some use custom mapped ports (like DSM59/60) for aggravating video in/outputs. Some use completely proprietary jacks to prevent cable cross-compatibility. 

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DylanDonohue In reply to Sonic840 [2018-12-10 17:13:13 +0000 UTC]

Whoops my bad

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radimek [2018-10-22 14:15:42 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for your hard job! Absolutly love it!

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BillieB0B [2018-06-14 18:50:38 +0000 UTC]

ummm....what am I missing? I saved from the displayed image and only got 1600x2133 rather than the 200 dpi 7200x9600 it should be. Help?

I joined Deviant Art just for this so hope you can help.
Thanx

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Sonic840 In reply to BillieB0B [2018-06-15 22:39:36 +0000 UTC]

Try right clicking the `Download Now` link on the right side of the page.
Alternatively, you can grab it here: Poster v2.0 300-01 20160131.png  on DA's Sta.sh  page. 

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Evilive98 [2018-03-29 13:42:06 +0000 UTC]

I've loved this chart since i seen it posted in my college class at NMSU

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azbigdogs [2018-01-24 20:36:19 +0000 UTC]

This is really cool thanks for creating it. This newest one I could find is version 2, is that the latest or is there a newer one coming out?  I did try and print it at Costco (hope that is permitted) for my home but the formatting wasn't working out right. I discovered the sizes 16x20 or 20x30 have an aspect ratios of 1.25:1 or 1.5:1 and the image is 1.33:1 so stuff gets chopped off no matter what size I try. Is there a version that would print better at those sizes?

Thanks

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To-mos [2017-12-08 01:13:48 +0000 UTC]

Coffee Lake came out 3 days ago.

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isaserr [2017-11-06 06:43:01 +0000 UTC]

Thanks.

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mostadorthsander [2017-10-18 12:05:43 +0000 UTC]

awesome

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eking [2017-06-12 12:23:20 +0000 UTC]

Fabulous thanks.

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Vadralis [2017-05-21 21:12:14 +0000 UTC]

You're a hero to my classmates.  People use your charts to study for the CompTIA A+ exam.  I wanted to let you know that we admire your work.  So thank you for this wonderful update.

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niiloy [2017-04-04 15:59:09 +0000 UTC]

wow, man!

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default-cube [2017-02-20 22:20:46 +0000 UTC]

Amazing collection. I do software development, but not for IOS (I do Android, though).

Here is an example of the kind of database-searching app that I have done.

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kraken14 [2017-01-27 23:01:41 +0000 UTC]

The dsub-9 (serial) port was also used by Apple 2 computers for a joysticks port (analog), and by software onb apples as the "Sirius Joyport" (digital). I don't see the 4pin 3 wire digi cables used on cd drives, I always used them building computers, and there was the digital out with 2 pins, never rran accros a cable for that though.

I think Your missing the slim sata used for laptop optical drives. Also the round 4 pin (2 5v, 2 12v) power plug used by older hardware, tower cd and hard drives mounted externally, I think some old scanners used them too, not so common anymore, although some media bays still have them. I could provide pictures of both if you like.

I'd suggest Splitting this in 4 as I'd like a similar chart  that also lists the pin numbers, periphereal card slots and ram be made one poster, the cpu's another and the third for HDD, ODD, FDD, and power. The last one for data, sound, and video ports, I'd like to see the usb a, b, mini, and micro, those are simply standard ports from a typical box of computer cables. Ram and cpu's quickly take up allot of space

I think there is only 3 other standardized power connectors, they might as well be included, the polarized dog bone and the two old radio power cords, one polarized. 

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Valet2 [2016-10-12 11:44:29 +0000 UTC]

I'm kinda stupid.. where can I buy the print?

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BloodiedSin [2016-10-06 23:51:36 +0000 UTC]

DAAAAAAAAAAMN

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ChikakoHatanaka [2016-10-06 15:30:36 +0000 UTC]

It is a like a very specialized type of nerd porn poster. I love it!

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argentstonecutter [2016-10-06 11:41:11 +0000 UTC]

Looks like it's missing all the USB-B ports. I'm not talking about the custom ports, just the standard ones: USB-B, USB-MINI-B, USB-MINI-B 4-PIN, USB-MICRO-B, USB-B 3.0, USB-B-MICRO-3. These are all in the USB "standard", they're not wacky one-offs from Nokia or Samsung. Also, there's officially a USB-MICRO-A but I don't think anyone's used it.

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Sonic840 In reply to argentstonecutter [2016-10-13 01:14:21 +0000 UTC]

Yes, USB B and other mini/micro varieties were left it off because they aren't really found on consumer computers. I did the same thing for some specialized ports found only on peripherals like mini-centronics and DIN/D-sub variants. Weird connectors found on peripherals, mobile phones, or micro/proto computers could be a poster just by themselves... Thanks for the comment!

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DD9448 [2016-06-29 11:10:49 +0000 UTC]

this is the greatest thing to ever exist

also - i read you were planning on making an iOS app, is there any chance of Android getting an app too?

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CapStar362 [2016-06-13 17:43:57 +0000 UTC]

Sonic,  as one of the purchasers of the 1.7 version,  do you give discounts for return customers on upgrading the poster?

original name was buyer-216074 - Andrew M

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Sonic840 In reply to CapStar362 [2016-06-25 18:01:40 +0000 UTC]

Sorry, but it doesn't like like DA has an upgrade path for art prints.

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Mautar55 [2016-05-26 22:23:43 +0000 UTC]

MY GASH!!! Can someone upload it on jpg? jaja

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JohnMazz [2016-05-24 16:53:03 +0000 UTC]

You said you're considering a non-print future version, but I hope you do consider continuing to make print version available. I know IT professionals that enjoy keeping these in their offices. A digital version would be great, but there's something about having a printed poster to inspect and keep that shouldn't be discounted. Great job!

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Sonic840 In reply to JohnMazz [2016-05-25 17:50:00 +0000 UTC]

Prints can be ordered via the "Buy this Print" button, you can also download the digital version and print your own if you have access to a plotter. 

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HANDBRAKEX [2016-04-24 15:15:40 +0000 UTC]

Hi Sonic840 and thanks for your chart.

It's soo much interesting and I would kile to print it as a poster.

Is it possible to have the link with the compressed file with the original resolution ?

Thanks, have a good day

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Sonic840 In reply to HANDBRAKEX [2016-05-25 17:55:53 +0000 UTC]

Yes, the download link to the 300DPI version is in the description. I believe it downloads as a 156MB .zip. 

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thedarave [2016-04-23 15:41:18 +0000 UTC]

I would suggest splitting this into two parts that are 27 inch by 40 inch. (Movie poster size) It'll be cheaper and easier to find frames for that size and give you room for expansion.
For Chart A, you could go with just CPU sockets, or CPU and memory. Chart B could be everything else plus room for growth. Having something poster size like this can be extremely helpful in places that deal with very old tech.

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WarAxe [2016-03-23 01:47:05 +0000 UTC]

YEAH!!!!  It's finally here!!!!!    

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