| pCi |
A bus common on Pentium computers that runs at speeds of up to 33MHz or 66MHz with a 32-bit-wide or 64-bit-wide data path. PCI-X released in September 1999 enables PCI to run at 133 MHz. For some chip sets, it serves as the middle layer between the memory bus and expansion buses.
Ãâó: www.build-your-own-cheap-computer.com/computer-ter...
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| pCi |
(Peripheral Component Interconnect) is a 32-bit local bus (data pathway) which is faster than ISA bus. Local buses are those that operate within a single system (as opposed to a network bus, which connects multiple systems). [top]
Ãâó: www.usbman.com/glossarycomputerterms.htm
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| pCi |
"Peripheral Component Interconnect" is a high-speed connection for devices including SCSI cards, video cards, sound cards, modems, video capture cards, etc. This is the primary way of adding devices to your computer. It is faster than ISA, so is preferred for devices such as sound cards and SCSI cards. It is slower than AGP which is for graphics cards only, so AGP graphics cards tend to be better than PCI ones. Default PCI speed is 33 MHz.
Ãâó: www.basichardware.com/glossary.html
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| pCi |
Peripheral Component Interconnect. PCI is a bus standard developed by Intel Corporation for PCs. PCI is a 64-bit bus, but can be implemented as a 32-bit bus; it can run at speeds of 33 MHz or 66 MHz.
Ãâó: www.quadron.com/speed/speed.html
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| pCi |
Peripheral Component Interconnect. A peripheral bus technology that is commonly used in desktop computers.
Ãâó: www.scottygroup.com/glossary
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