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Where does the image of a data connector as a sharp metal spike originate from?


Where does the concept of infected people turning into zombies only after death originate from?Where does the motif of a reanimated human head originate?Where did the notion that Dragons could speak originate?Where does the archetypal image of the 'Grey' alien come from?Where did the suffix '-Man' originate?Where does the notion of being injured or killed by an illusion originate?Where did the term “sophont” originate?Where does the trope of magic spells being driven by advanced technology originate from?Where did the term “the living impaired” originate?






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margin-bottom:0;









2















In several fictional universes, if a robot or cyborg has to physically interface with a computer, a very long sharp metal spike is used, instead of a normal cable socket with multiple wires insulated from each other as we do in real life. Bonus points if that data connector doubles as a deadly weapon.



I don't remember any real-life data connector of that style (besides headphone jacks, but they are nowhere that big). Did such a thing really exist, and which fictional universe does it originate from as a standard robot's interface kit?



Robocop (1987)R2D2










share|improve this question
























  • R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

    – Valorum
    8 hours ago












  • I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

    – vsz
    8 hours ago











  • Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

    – FuzzyBoots
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

    – SpaceWolf1701
    8 hours ago

















2















In several fictional universes, if a robot or cyborg has to physically interface with a computer, a very long sharp metal spike is used, instead of a normal cable socket with multiple wires insulated from each other as we do in real life. Bonus points if that data connector doubles as a deadly weapon.



I don't remember any real-life data connector of that style (besides headphone jacks, but they are nowhere that big). Did such a thing really exist, and which fictional universe does it originate from as a standard robot's interface kit?



Robocop (1987)R2D2










share|improve this question
























  • R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

    – Valorum
    8 hours ago












  • I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

    – vsz
    8 hours ago











  • Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

    – FuzzyBoots
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

    – SpaceWolf1701
    8 hours ago













2












2








2








In several fictional universes, if a robot or cyborg has to physically interface with a computer, a very long sharp metal spike is used, instead of a normal cable socket with multiple wires insulated from each other as we do in real life. Bonus points if that data connector doubles as a deadly weapon.



I don't remember any real-life data connector of that style (besides headphone jacks, but they are nowhere that big). Did such a thing really exist, and which fictional universe does it originate from as a standard robot's interface kit?



Robocop (1987)R2D2










share|improve this question














In several fictional universes, if a robot or cyborg has to physically interface with a computer, a very long sharp metal spike is used, instead of a normal cable socket with multiple wires insulated from each other as we do in real life. Bonus points if that data connector doubles as a deadly weapon.



I don't remember any real-life data connector of that style (besides headphone jacks, but they are nowhere that big). Did such a thing really exist, and which fictional universe does it originate from as a standard robot's interface kit?



Robocop (1987)R2D2







history-of






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 9 hours ago









vszvsz

6,3766 gold badges37 silver badges79 bronze badges




6,3766 gold badges37 silver badges79 bronze badges















  • R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

    – Valorum
    8 hours ago












  • I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

    – vsz
    8 hours ago











  • Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

    – FuzzyBoots
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

    – SpaceWolf1701
    8 hours ago

















  • R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

    – Valorum
    8 hours ago












  • I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

    – vsz
    8 hours ago











  • Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

    – FuzzyBoots
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

    – SpaceWolf1701
    8 hours ago
















R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

– Valorum
8 hours ago






R2-D2's SCOMP isn't a sharp metal spike...

– Valorum
8 hours ago














I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

– vsz
8 hours ago





I might not have picked the best illustration, but there are other data spikes in the Star Wars universe, and they are more sharp than the SCOMP you named. Still, it's a big and long spike, even if not as sharp as the one Robocop uses.

– vsz
8 hours ago













Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

– FuzzyBoots
8 hours ago





Shadowrun used it two years after RoboCop.

– FuzzyBoots
8 hours ago




1




1





IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

– SpaceWolf1701
8 hours ago





IRL, much smaller electronic connections like those on headphones were in use for decades prior to either RoboCop or Star Wars, so there's some precedent. But a giant literal spike like RoboCop's? I dunno about that one, it might well be the first of its kind, because there's no reason to have just a giant spike unless you needed it for a scene where you use it as an improvised weapon.

– SpaceWolf1701
8 hours ago










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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9

















real-life data connector




RCA connectors are simple spikes:



RCA connectors



And coaxial cables have spike connectors too:



coaxial cable connector



As well as cable TV, the first commercial versions of Ethernet, 10BASE5 and 10BASE2, used coaxial cables. Additional connections could be made by piercing the cable at any point with a vampire tap. This system was phased out in the late 80s.






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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    9

















    real-life data connector




    RCA connectors are simple spikes:



    RCA connectors



    And coaxial cables have spike connectors too:



    coaxial cable connector



    As well as cable TV, the first commercial versions of Ethernet, 10BASE5 and 10BASE2, used coaxial cables. Additional connections could be made by piercing the cable at any point with a vampire tap. This system was phased out in the late 80s.






    share|improve this answer





























      9

















      real-life data connector




      RCA connectors are simple spikes:



      RCA connectors



      And coaxial cables have spike connectors too:



      coaxial cable connector



      As well as cable TV, the first commercial versions of Ethernet, 10BASE5 and 10BASE2, used coaxial cables. Additional connections could be made by piercing the cable at any point with a vampire tap. This system was phased out in the late 80s.






      share|improve this answer



























        9














        9










        9










        real-life data connector




        RCA connectors are simple spikes:



        RCA connectors



        And coaxial cables have spike connectors too:



        coaxial cable connector



        As well as cable TV, the first commercial versions of Ethernet, 10BASE5 and 10BASE2, used coaxial cables. Additional connections could be made by piercing the cable at any point with a vampire tap. This system was phased out in the late 80s.






        share|improve this answer














        real-life data connector




        RCA connectors are simple spikes:



        RCA connectors



        And coaxial cables have spike connectors too:



        coaxial cable connector



        As well as cable TV, the first commercial versions of Ethernet, 10BASE5 and 10BASE2, used coaxial cables. Additional connections could be made by piercing the cable at any point with a vampire tap. This system was phased out in the late 80s.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 8 hours ago









        OrangeDogOrangeDog

        3,0192 gold badges16 silver badges28 bronze badges




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