PC Card slots originally used a 16-bit ISA bus
PCI, and AGP
PCIe or USB 2.0 bus standards.
It`s universal Serial Bus
A video card is plugged into an expansion slot on the peripheral bus. The exact type of peripheral bus slot varies according to the type of motherboard used. Originally, video cards were plugged into an ISA slot. Eventually they went in PCI slots, then AGP slots, and today, PCI-Express slots. Regardless of the type of peripheral bus interface, the peripheral bus connects peripheral cards, also called expansion boards, with the system chipset.
PCI Express bus standard or the USB 2.0 standard
In the back of most desktop computers are removable tabs that cover slots that have been cut into the frame. When you remove the cover from your computer you will see that there are slots which align with the tabs. A tab can be removed and an interface card can be installed at that location. PCI BUSS and PCI slots are one of the types of communication formats used by desktop computers. is a computer bus for attaching hardware devices in a computer. ... trexie z. umpad to........
pci bus
No, Memory slots are on the motherboard bus.
PCI X stands for Peripheral Component Interconnect Extended. It is used for expansion of 32 bit PCI bus slots. The slots are used to enhance the capabilities of the motherboard.
The PCI bus is an unterminated bus using either 3.3V or 5V signaling voltages. Cards using PCI are keyed by slots in their edge connector to prevent plugging the card into a connector on a bus that expects signaling voltages that they are not compatible with.
ISA bus was a standard used for years. It was first 8-bit, being the standard expansion slot for most 8086/8088 motherboards, but later extended to 16-bit, which was the standard for 286, 386, and 486 motherboards. Most standard PC's had ISA slots through the late 1990's. They began to be phased out in the early 2000's, and are now obsolete. VESA Local bus was an extension of the standard 16-bit ISA bus, and gave a 32-bit expansion slot. These were seen in late 486 and early Pentium motherboards, which would often have two or three VESA Local Bus slots in addition to 16-bit ISA slots. They were short lived, quickly replaced by PCI slots. PCI was introduced in the mid 1990's, and are still common today. Some late 486 motherboards had two or three PCI slots in addition to 16-bit ISA slots, and they became standard with Pentium systems (most Pentium motherboards, Pentium II motherboards, and some Pentium III motherboards still had some ISA slots in addition to the PCI slots). MCA was bus developed by IBM and used in their PS/2 systems. It is to buses what Beta is to the VCR: A good technology, but made obsolete because it's developers made it too expensive for other manufacturers to license. MCA offered a 32-bit bus before VESA Local Bus or PCI were available.
It controls the part of the external data bus connected to the expansion slots.