helmanfrow wrote:Was this connector chosen strictly because of its durability or is the product aimed at a specific market? Or both?
I would say a strong requirement on reliability is what inspires the choice of locking connectors on both sides of this adapter cable (and the interface box, left-side at least).
On external side of the adapter cable you see a D-Something (screws on both sides), while onboard the interface box there's an SFF-8088 connector that locks in place without having to turn screws.
And, reliability in connection aside (these can't be pulled off inadvertently, something you can't say of FireWire, USB or Thunderbolt connectors), there's bandwidth issues to dictate what you can use, and what not. The SFF-8088, for instance, is a common feature on high-performance, enterprise-level storage solution and DSP/Control buses (also called a mini-SAS connector, Serial Attached SCSI), which shall grant a throughput of about 10 Gbit/s if memory serves me right. Which means video, real-time processing, heavy and sustained traffic indeed.
Consider, in addition to all this, that a manufacturer has to opt for a connection solution that not only copes with the technical specifications of both the device and its range of applications, but a connection solution that can be sourced from a possibly unlimited number of vendors because you might be forced to review your production costs, and/or because you might be forced to re-locate production elsewhere, and because you want third parties to develop devices that connects to the one one you're designing.
Another factor that's worth considering, too, is the time with which a manufacturer developing his own products must market a new product after it's been designed and built, which strongly suggests that you shouldn't reinvent the wheel when designing your products, as this would greatly slow the final stages of the design process (you need to source from suppliers, not get bobby-trapped into a blind alley with a connector that only you can build, and in the hope that it will work flawlessly for the next 50 years.
I haven't got the prescription glasses on my nose as of now, but at first sight I'd say the D-Something connector is of the type widely used in high performance computing, which would justify serious business at expansion cards level anyway.