S-100 bus - tradução para Inglês
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S-100 bus - tradução para Inglês

EARLY COMPUTER BUS
S100 bus; IEEE-696; IEEE 696; Altair bus; S-100 computer; IEEE 696-1983
  • S-100}} bus. It uses a Motorola 68020 processor with 68881 co-processor and 16 Kbytes of high-speed cache memory. This CPU is used in the Cromemco CS-250 computer, widely deployed by the U.S. Air Force.
  • S-100}} Systems at the [[Chicago Mercantile Exchange]] in 1984
  • S-100}} backplane (1981)

S-100 bus         
ناقل ذو 100 خط
address bus         
  • conventional PCI]] bus card slot (very bottom)
SYSTEM THAT TRANSFERS DATA BETWEEN COMPONENTS WITHIN A COMPUTER
Data bus; Address bus; Computer buses; Memory bus; Bus (computer); I/O bus; Internal bus; 100MHz bus; 133MHz bus; Asynchronous bus; Synchronous bus; PC bus; Hardware bus; External data bus; Computer bus; RAM bus; External bus; Cache bus; Digital bus; Computer/bus; Interconnect (computing); Data buses; Draft:Data Bus; Data highway; Address line; Motherboard bus; Processor bus
ناقل عنوان ، موصل العناوين
internal bus         
  • conventional PCI]] bus card slot (very bottom)
SYSTEM THAT TRANSFERS DATA BETWEEN COMPONENTS WITHIN A COMPUTER
Data bus; Address bus; Computer buses; Memory bus; Bus (computer); I/O bus; Internal bus; 100MHz bus; 133MHz bus; Asynchronous bus; Synchronous bus; PC bus; Hardware bus; External data bus; Computer bus; RAM bus; External bus; Cache bus; Digital bus; Computer/bus; Interconnect (computing); Data buses; Draft:Data Bus; Data highway; Address line; Motherboard bus; Processor bus
ناقل داخلى .

Definição

computer bus
bus

Wikipédia

S-100 bus

The S-100 bus or Altair bus, IEEE 696-1983 (withdrawn), is an early computer bus designed in 1974 as a part of the Altair 8800. The S-100 bus was the first industry standard expansion bus for the microcomputer industry. S-100 computers, consisting of processor and peripheral cards, were produced by a number of manufacturers. The S-100 bus formed the basis for homebrew computers whose builders (e.g., the Homebrew Computer Club) implemented drivers for CP/M and MP/M. These S-100 microcomputers ran the gamut from hobbyist toy to small business workstation and were common in early home computers until the advent of the IBM PC.