Etherpocket-SP
parallel port Ethernet adapter (). Supports both coaxial (
10BASE2) and twisted pair (
10BASE-T) cables. Power is drawn from a
PS/2 port passthrough cable. Before the introduction of the PCMCIA card, the
parallel port was commonly used for portable peripherals. The PCMCIA 1.0 card standard was published by the
Personal Computer Memory Card International Association in November 1990 and was soon adopted by more than eighty vendors. It corresponds with the Japanese
JEIDA memory card 4.0 standard.
Intel authored the Exchangeable Card Architecture (ExCA) specification, but later merged this into the PCMCIA.
SanDisk (operating at the time as "SunDisk") launched its PCMCIA card in October 1992. The company was the first to introduce a writeable
Flash RAM card for the
HP 95LX (an early MS-DOS pocket computer). These cards conformed to a supplemental PCMCIA-ATA standard that allowed them to appear as more conventional IDE hard drives to the 95LX or a PC. This had the advantage of raising the upper limit on capacity to the full 32 MB available under DOS 3.22 on the 95LX.
New Media Corporation was one of the first companies established for the express purpose of manufacturing PC Cards; they became a major
OEM for laptop manufacturers such as
Toshiba and
Compaq for PC Card products. It soon became clear that the PCMCIA card standard needed expansion to support "smart" I/O cards to address the emerging need for fax, modem, LAN, harddisk and floppy disk cards. It also needed interrupt facilities and
hot plugging, which required the definition of new BIOS and operating system interfaces. This led to the introduction of release 2.0 of the PCMCIA standard and
JEIDA 4.1 in September 1991, which saw corrections and expansion with Card Services (CS) in the PCMCIA 2.1 standard in November 1992. To recognize increased scope beyond memory, and to aid in marketing, the association acquired the rights to the simpler term "PC Card" from
IBM. This was the name of the standard from version 2 of the specification onwards. These cards were used for
wireless networks, modems, and other functions in notebook PCs. After the release of
PCIe-based
ExpressCard in 2003, laptop manufacturers started to fit ExpressCard slots to new laptops instead of PC Card slots. == Form factors ==