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Bus 22 connects to the Southbridge area.

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1y ago

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What is the differences between the southbridge and the northbridge?

The north and south bridge refer to the data channels to the CPU. The memory goes to CPU using the north bridge. And the mouse, keyboard, CD ROM, HDD, ext data flows to the CPU using the southbridge. The northbridge is the portion of the chipset HUB that connects faster I/O buses (for example, an AGP bus) to the system bus. Northbridge chip tends to be larger than the southbridge chip. The southbridge is the HUB that connects to slower I/O buses (for example, an ISA bus) to the system bus. The Northbridge and the Southbridge are known as the chipset on the motherboard. These set of chips collectively control the memory cache, external bus, and some peripherals. There is a fast end of the hub, and there is a slow end of the hub. The fast end of the hub is the Northbridge, containing the graphics and memory controller connecting to the system bus. The slower end of the hub is the Southbridge, containing the I/O controller hub.


Which part of the chipset connects directly to the processor the northbridge or southbridge?

NorthBridge


What are special purpose chips and electronic circuits that control the transfer of data instructions and information from a disk to and from a systems bus and other components in the computer?

This sounds like a disk controller and possibly an I/O port. A disk drive has to have a controller. The controller is connected to the system bus or the southbridge chip, and that is how it is connected to the rest of the system. The controller uses a driver to tell the operating system how to communicate with it.If you mean further back than that, then you may be referring to the chipset chips. There is a northbridge and a southbridge, and it is the southbridge that connects to the peripheral bus and to any disk controllers.


How are output devices connected to the CPU?

Output devices are connected to the CPU through the northbridge and southbridge, (collectively called the chipset) but they connect to different devices. The northbridge connects to the graphics output, while the southbridge connects to all other output devices (sound, storage, network, and others).


What are the two key chips or chipsets on a motherboard?

Outside of the CPU and the memory, the two main chips on the motherboard are the Northbridge and the Southbridge. Traditionally, the Northbridge contained the AGP controller, the memory controller, and the bus to the CPU. It is also connected to the Southbridge which is connected to the peripheral bus, the BIOS, the front panel, the keyboard, sound, and the hard drive controller. So functionally speaking, the Northbridge is closest to the CPU and the memory, and the Southbridge is closest to the user.


What is the north pole and southpole in computer motherboard?

I am not familiar with the term north pole or south pole in relation to a computer motherboard, and think it likely that the question refers to the north bridge and south bridge instead.The north and south bridges are parts of the chipset, which connects the CPU with memory, other direct main bus users (such as advanced graphics cards), and peripheral components.The north bridge provides a bus arbitration service between high performance components (CPU, memory, GPU), while the southbridge provides connectivity to other busses, such as the USB, PCI or IDE bus. In a graphical arrangement with the lesser peripheral components at the bottom of a drawing and the CPU on drawn on top, the northbridge is directly connected to the CPU and, therefore, resides "in the north." The southbridge itself connects to the northbridge, and in the drawing resides "further south."Northbridge and southbridge are conceptual ideas, and may not be implemented as dedicated chips in modern chipsets.


What is north pole and north pole in motherboard?

I am not familiar with the term north pole or south pole in relation to a computer motherboard, and think it likely that the question refers to the north bridge and south bridge instead.The north and south bridges are parts of the chipset, which connects the CPU with memory, other direct main bus users (such as advanced graphics cards), and peripheral components.The north bridge provides a bus arbitration service between high performance components (CPU, memory, GPU), while the southbridge provides connectivity to other busses, such as the USB, PCI or IDE bus. In a graphical arrangement with the lesser peripheral components at the bottom of a drawing and the CPU on drawn on top, the northbridge is directly connected to the CPU and, therefore, resides "in the north." The southbridge itself connects to the northbridge, and in the drawing resides "further south."Northbridge and southbridge are conceptual ideas, and may not be implemented as dedicated chips in modern chipsets.


What is a generator bus?

A generator bus is the bus that connects the generator to it's generating transformer.


What is generator bus?

A generator bus is the bus that connects the generator to it's generating transformer.


An expansion bus always connects to faster end of the chipset the north bridge. true or false?

Typically, a PCI express x16 slot, where your graphics card is installed, is connected to the Northbridge, or in some occasions, to the CPU directly. Most other expansion cards run through the Southbridge. The northbridge has the shortest route to the CPU, making it the fastest. Used for AGP / PCI express graphics and RAM. Southbridge has the longest route to the CPU, so slower devices, such as IDE/SATA, USB, PCI all go through the southbridge. Hope this helps.


A bus that connects major computer components is called?

system bus


What network topology connects to a trunk cable?

Bus Topology.