Why are the terms used for the sexes of HDMI connectors backwards from others?

MaxxFordham1

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With other cables I've seen, the MALE end is the one where there is a center pin or set of pins plugging into a jack where there's a receiving hole in the center, whether or not there's also a female-like sheathe of some kind around the connector pins. For examples: coaxial cables (F, RCA, etc.), DIN cables (S-video, some older rounded computer cable plugs, etc.), "D" plugs, and DVI. Of course there would be others, too. Okay, so the one with the pins has been male, while the one that the pins plug into is female, even if the one with the holes fits into an outer casing that the one with the pins is in.

Well, that's been true up until HDMI came out, apparently. Look at HDMI and what the industry is calling its "female" and "male" ends. They're calling the end with the pin row the female end, and the end with the slot that the row of pins plugs into the "male" end (and keep in mind that the end with the bar of pins is also the end with a female-like casing around it, just as I pointed out above, yet those above like that are still MALE; yes, the slotted end of HDMI sort-of plugs into the sheathed-like end, but then so do several of those others I mentioned above which were always called FEmale, because what really counts has been the PINS, not the edges. So why isn't HDMI's PIN end the one called MALE like the others?

Also, who is it in the industry that first insisted that this slotted end of HDMI should be called backwards of other kinds of plugs, the "male" end, and that the end with the pins in the middle should be called backwards of other connectors, the "female" end? Who from the industry started that and sort-of "dictated" to encyclopedias, etc. that this is "how it's supposed to be," and what made them the supposed "authority"?


Will you come back and see my responses to yours, please?

Thanks,
Mike
 
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