A ladder made from nylon tape, originally made by chaining together several loops of nylon tape
A method of connecting several devices to a single I/O channel (such as used with SCSI)
A daisy chain is a string of daisies that have been joined together by their stems to make a necklace. daisies attached together into a string that you can wear around your neck or wrist
flower chain consisting of a string of daisies linked by their stems; worn by students on class day at some schools (figurative) a series of associated things or people or experiences
A network topology where multiple devices are connected one to another in sequence and terminated at the ends
A hardware configuration in which devices are connected one to another in a series The SCSI interface , for example, supports a daisy chain of up to 7 devices
An IEEE 1394 serial bus arrangement that allows several devices to be connected simultaneously in a line to a single computer See IEEE 1394
A local networking topology in which a single cable runs to multiple workstations This tends to be less expensive than the the alternative star topology, but it is also less robust A break anywhere along the chain will disable the entire chain Daisy chains are most often used in PhoneNet or thinnet cabling This topology is discouraged for use in local Mednet networks
A slang term applied to a series of transactions in which fuel is transferred between several parties, often related Usually used (legally) to overcome federal regulations Sometimes used illegally to hide identity of purchaser, or to disguise illegal transactions
flower chain consisting of a string of daisies linked by their stems; worn by students on class day at some schools
A method of connecting one wheeled bag to another so that both can be pulled from one handle
Connection of multiple devices in a serial fashion [An advantage of daisy chaining is a savings in transmission facilities The disadvantage is that if a device malfunctions, all other devices daisy-chained behind it are disabled ]
A method of connecting hardware peripherals to a computer and to each other, means one peripheral is attached to the computer, another is attached to the first one, another to the second one, and so on Any signal from the computer would go through the first peripheral to the second, to the third, and down the chain
(n ) A specific method of propagating signals along a bus This method is often used in applications in which devices not requesting a daisy-chained signal respond to a signal by passing it on The daisy chain scheme permits assignment of device priorities based on the electrical position of the device on the bus
A wiring scheme in which device A is wired to device B, device B is wired to device C, etc The last device is normally wired to a switch or circuit breaker
In telecommunications, a wiring method where each telephone jack in a building is wired in series from the previous jack Daisy chain is NOT the preferred wiring method, since a break in the wiring would disable all jacks "downstream" from the break See also Home Run