Title: Expansion Buses
1Expansion Buses
- Industry Standard Architecture (ISA)
- Micro Channel Architecture (MCA)
- Enhanced Industry Standard Architecture (EISA)
- VESA Local Bus (VL-Bus)
- Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI)
- Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP)
- Universal Serial Bus (USB)
- Small Computer Systems Interface (SCSI)
- FireWire
- Personal Computer Memory Card International
Association (PCMCIA)
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3Industry Standard Architecture (ISA)
An expansion bus commonly used in PCs. It accepts
plug-in boards that control the sound, video
display and other peripherals. Most PCs today
have a combination of ISA and PCI slots however,
many no longer support ISA, and it is expected to
be obsolete by the mid 2000s.Originally called
the "AT bus," it was first used in the IBM AT,
extending the 8-bit bus to 16 bits. Earlier ISA
PCs provided a mix of 8 and 16-bit slots. Today,
PCs have only 16-bit ISA slots.
4Micro Channel Architecture (MCA)
- It was a proprietary 32-bit bus from IBM used in
PS/2, RS/6000 and certain ES/9370 models. It
supported 15 levels of bus mastering and
transferred data from 20 to 80MBytes/sec. The
boards had a unique, built-in ID that allowed for
easier installation than ISA devices. In late
1996, IBM discontinued its use in favor of PCI.
5Enhanced Industry Standard Architecture (EISA)
- EISA was developed in 1988 by a group of nine
companies including Compaq, Hewlett-Packard, NEC,
Zenith and others. EISA was developed in response
to IBM's efforts in developing the MCA bus (Micro
channel Architecture). EISA was designed to
increase the capabilities of ISA (hence the
"enhanced"). With this increase in bus width and
using an 8.33 MHz clock, the EISA can reach a
theoretical 33 MB/s transfer rate.
6VESA Local Bus
- (VESA Local-BUS) A peripheral bus from VESA that
was primarily used in 486s. It provides a
high-speed data path between the CPU and
peripherals (video, disk, network, etc.). VL-bus
is a 32-bit bus that supports bus mastering and
runs at speeds up to 40MHz. It generally provides
up to three slots on the motherboard, each slot
using one 32-bit Micro Channel connector placed
adjacent to the standard ISA, EISA or Micro
Channel connector.
7Peripheral Component Interface (PCI)
- PCI was primarily designed by Intel and unveiled
in 1992. PCI provides a high-speed data path
between the CPU and peripheral devices (video,
disk, network, etc.). There are typically three
or four PCI slots on the motherboard. In a
Pentium PC, there is generally a mix of PCI and
ISA slots or PCI and EISA slots. The PCI bus/slot
has become the industry standard because it
transmits data at a fast rate and because it is
simply replacing the older slots such as ISA,
EISA and MCA. The PCI slot/bus is useable for
most every type of daughter board except for the
video cards that are designed for the AGP slot.
8Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP)
- AGP is a relatively new high-speed graphics
port/bus that was developed by Intel. It provides
a direct connection between the display adaptor
and memory. It is designed to handle graphics
better than the PCI port does such as 3-D
graphics. It allows the graphics controller to
directly access main memory and allows 3-D
textures to be stored in main memory rather than
video memory. Only 3D video cards connect to the
AGP slot. The brown AGP slot is slightly shorter
than the white PCI slot and is located about an
inch farther back. AGP uses a 32-bit bus. The
original AGP standard (AGP 1x) provides a data
transfer rate of 264 Mbytes/sec. AGP 2x is 528
Mbytes/sec. AGP 4x is 1 Gbytes/sec. AGP 8x is 2
Gbytes
9Universal Serial Bus (USB)
- The USB bus was introduced in 1996. It is mostly
used for low-speed peripherals such as the
keyboard, mouse, printers, scanners and digital
cameras. It is a unique bus because it doesn't
connect to daughter boards like the EISA, ISA,
PCI and AGP slots do and it doesn't connect to
storage devices like SCSI does. Instead, USB
ports are connected to your motherboard but is
external of your tower. USB has a maximum
bandwidth of 12 Mbits/sec (equivalent to 1.5
Mbytes/sec), and up to 127 devices can be
attached to a single USB port.
10FireWire
- The FireWire high-speed serial bus was developed
by Apple Computer and Texas Instruments. It is
quite similar to USB as it connects devices to
your computer. The difference is that FireWire
can only connect up to 63 devices but is a whole
lot faster than USB. Also known as the IEEE 1394
standard, the original spec calls for 100, 200
and 400 Mbits/sec transfer rates.
11Small Computer Systems Interface (SCSI)
12Personal Computer Memory Card International
Association (PCMCIA)
- Personal Computer Memory Card International
Association, San Jose, CA. An international
standards body and trade association that was
founded in 1989 to establish a standard for
connecting peripherals to portable computers.
PCMCIA created the PC Card.