None standard DB-25.... Dave, shame on you.
RS232 on DB25 was the standard, the DB15, or DB9 were not.
It's a DB15 and I said non-standard
Surely you mean DA15? The 2nd letter is the case size, so in the 'normal' dual row config D shell connectors are:
DE9
DA15
DB25
DC37
DD50
Also, IIRC it's 20mA loop, and not RS-232. Yes you read that right, it pre-dates RS-232 !!!!!
As for the "Here Is" key, it sends the programmed answerback, which can also be sent by the remote side sending a Control-E (ENQ - Enquire). It was a cheap/easy way for a remote side to detect a device, or send perhaps a short loginID or something like that. Terminals like the VT100 also had a builtin answerback (which we would abuse in college by setting it to "^log^m"). That empty socket is for a PROM it would be burned onto.
FAST = 300 baud = 30 characters/sec of (start + 8 data + stop)
SLOW = 110 baud = 10 characters/sec of (start + 8 data + 2 stop)
and the 8 data could be 7 data+parity
I last used one of these in the mid 1980s, it was still the cheapest, most portable printer you could find. Sure an LA120 was faster, but it was huge, and decidedly non-portable.
Lastly to the loser that in here said "archaic piece of junk", we wouldn't have the stuff we do, without innovative stuff like the Silent 700.