Payment Voucher Template

Payment Voucher Template 

A payment voucher is bond which is worth a certain monetary value and which may be spent only for specific reasons or on specific goods.
Examples include but are not limited to housing, travel and food vouchers. The term voucher is also a synonym for receipt and is often used to refer to receipts used as evidence of the declaration that a service has been performed or that an expenditure has been made.
The below is a payment voucher template that can be used for record. 

Payment Voucher Template

Coaxial Data Cable

Coaxial Data Cable

Connecting your cable box to your TV or your cable modem to the wall outlet. Some people use it for digital audio connections as well.

Invented in the 1920s and in commercial use since the 1940s, this is the granddaddy of cables. Medium-thick and either white or black, it has a little screw connector at the end.


Composite Data Cable

Composite Data Cable

Connecting DVD players and other video equipment to older analog TV sets.

One rung up from coaxial in terms of signal quality. Composite cables look like a three-headed hydra of sorts, the red and white strands carry stereo audio, while the (non-HD) video signal rides the yellow line. 


Component Data Cable

Component Data Cable 

Connecting DVD players and other video equipment to newer HDTV sets. Component cable was the video cable champ until HDMI came around, and is still in wide use.


Another three-headed cable with a name that is frustratingly similar to composite, but there are big differences. Component cables support HDTV signals. Component cables divide video data into three separate signals for a better quality image, but they do not carry an audio signal. The ends are red, blue and green.




DVI (Digital Visual Interface) Data Cable


DVI (Digital Visual Interface) Data Cable

Connecting computers to LCD monitors and digital projectors.

DVI and HDMI are similar in that they both handle an all-digital signal, but DVI cables are video only. To confuse you, there are different kinds of DVI cables (some are analog only, some are digital); DVI-I cables can handle both analog and digital signals. Image quality can degrade if the DVI cable is too long, but the technical standard states that DVI cables must maintain the signal up to 16 feet.




Mini DVI (Digital Visual Interface) Data Cable

Mini DVI (Digital Visual Interface) Data Cable

Connecting various Apple computers to display devices like TV sets and external monitors.

Apple began to phase out the Mini DVI connector on its machines last year in favor of the newer Mini Display Port. Still, with the right adapter, the Mini DVI jack can pump out video from the Mac to bigger screens equipped with VGA, DVI or regular composite or S-Video connections.

Ethernet (A K A Cat-5 Or Cat-6) Cable

Ethernet (A K A Cat-5 Or Cat-6) Cable

Connecting computers and workgroup printers to high-speed computer networks.

Ethernet cable looks a lot like telephone cable, but the connectors are a little bit wider than the cords that go into your phone. Ethernet jacks are now standard on desktop and laptops and can also connect game consoles and TiVos to home networks.

Fire Wire (A K A IEEE 1394) Cable

Fire Wire (A K A IEEE 1394) Cable

Connecting video cameras and external hard drives to a computer.

An Apple-invented standard that’s on the outs. FireWire 400 and FireWire 800 have different connectors (even FireWire 400 has two kinds of plugs — 4-pin and 6-pin). There are “bilingual” cables that can connect one kind of device to another. Apple has dropped FireWire on its entry-level laptops and has gone with USB 2.0 instead.


HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface) Cable

HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface) Cable 

Connecting HDTV sets to Blue-ray or DVD players and other home entertainment gear.

The current standard for high-end AV equipment. HDMI is an all-digital connection that carries both audio and video over one reasonably thin cable.


S-Video Cable

S-Video Cable

Linking DVD players, game consoles, computers and older video equipment to the television set when component connections are not available.


S-Video (the “s” is for “separate”) is considered better than composite, but not as good as component cable. S-Video cables do not carry audio and do not support high-definition video. S-Video has been superseded by component connections for home video, but you still may find it on PCs.



Mini USB Cable

Mini USB Cable

Connecting smaller devices like digital cameras and some smart phones to the computer.


Mini-USB and the newer Micro-USB ports are found on the sides of cameras and other devices with limited space for cable jacks. The small end of the cable goes into the device and the large end into the computer’s standard USB port.




USB (Universal Serial Bus) Cable

USB (Universal Serial Bus) Cable

Cable Connecting just about any type of computer peripheral (hard drives, MP3 players, printers, etc.) to the computer.


USB is the most common way to attach devices to your computer. It can also provide power to those devices. One end of a USB cable may look different from the other (printer USB cables usually have a boxier plug at one end), but the flat part always goes into the computer. The latest standard is USB 2.0



VGA (Video Graphics Array) Cable

VGA (Video Graphics Array) Cable  

Connecting PCs to external analog monitors.


VGA has been around for roughly 20 years, and is considered the lowest-common denominator for video output on many PC systems. Some game consoles and video projectors connect by way of VGA as well. Advanced variations of the technology include Super VGA and XGA (Extended Graphics Array).



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