Sata (serial ata), Smbus (system management bus), Spd (serial presence detect) – AOpen AK77-600N User Manual

Page 101: Usb 2.0 (universal serial bus)

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The Serial ATA specification is designed to overcome speed limitations while enabling the storage interface to scale with the

growing media rate demands of PC platforms. Serial ATA is to replace parallel

ATA

with the compatibility with existing operating

systems and drivers, adding performance headroom for years to come. It is developed with data transfer rate of 150

Mbytes/second, and 300M/bs, 600M/bs to come. It reduces voltage and pins count requirements and can be implemented with

thin and easy to route cables.

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SMBus is also called I

2

C bus. It is a two-wire bus developed for component communication (especially for semiconductor IC).

For example, set clock of clock generator for jumper-less motherboard. The data transfer rate of SMBus is only 100Kbit/s, it

allows one host to communicate with CPU and many masters and slaves to send/receive message.

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SPD is a small ROM or

EEPROM

device resided on the DIMM or

RIMM

. SPD stores memory module information such as DRAM

timing and chip parameters. SPD can be used by

BIOS

to decide best timing for this DIMM or RIMM.

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A Universal Serial Bus (USB) is an external bus (an interconnection) standard that supports data transfer rates of 12 Mbps. A

single USB port can be used to connect up to 127 peripheral devices, such as mouse, modems and keyboards. Introduced in

1996, USB has completed replaced serial and parallel ports. It also supports plug-and-play installations and hot plugging

Plug-and-play is the ability to add and remove devices to a computer while the computer is running and have the operating

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