A Microsoft InPort bus mouse adapter, in the form of an 8-bit ISA (XT-bus) card.
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Type | Computer mouse input port | ||
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Designer | Microsoft | ||
Designed | late 1980s | ||
Produced | 1980s to 2000 | ||
Superseded by | PS/2 port, USB (2000 ) | ||
External | Yes | ||
Cable | 9 wires plus shield | ||
Pins | 9 | ||
Connector | Mini-DIN-9 | ||
Data signal | 30–200 Hz (interrupt mode) with 3 button state signals and quadrature signals for mouse movement | ||
Male connector from the front | |||
Pin 1 | SW2 | Mouse button 2 | |
Pin 2 | SW3 | Mouse button 3 | |
Pin 3 | GND | Ground | |
Pin 4 | XB | X position | |
Pin 5 | YA | Y position | |
Pin 6 | YB | Y position | |
Pin 7 | SW1 | Mouse button 1 | |
Pin 8 | Vcc | +5 V Power | |
Pin 9 | XA | X position | |
XA/XB and YA/YB indicate movement and direction based on quadrature phase. |
A bus mouse is a variety of PC computer mouse which is attached to the computer using a specialized interface (originally, the Microsoft InPort interface developed for Microsoft's original mouse product).
In the late 1980s, mice were not integrated with IBM-compatible personal computers, and the specialized bus interface (implemented via an ISA add-in card) was one of two popular ways to connect a mouse. (Serial interfaces, common on engineering workstations, were the other method.) When the IBM PS/2 was introduced, it included a motherboard mouse interface which was integrated with the keyboard controller (still called the PS/2 mouse interface long after the PS/2 brand was withdrawn); this fairly quickly drove the bus mouse design out of the marketplace.
The bus mouse lived on in the NEC PC-98 family of personal computers in Japan.