MSI 645 Ultra Manual page 69

Ms-6547 (v1.x) atx mainboard
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Glossary
a PC chipset provides the electronic interfaces between all subsystems.
CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor)
CMOS is a widely used type of semiconductor, which features high speed and low power
consumption. PCs usually contain a small amount of battery-powered CMOS memory to
retain the date, time, and system setup parameters.
COM
In MS-DOS system, the name of a serial communications port. DOS supports four serial
ports. For example, if a modem is connected to one serial port and a serial mouse to another,
they are identified as COM1 and COM2.
DIMM (dual in-line memory module)
A small circuit board that holds memory chips. A SIMM (single in-line memory module) has
a 32-bit path to the memory chips whereas a DIMM has 64-bit path.
DMA (direct memory access)
A transfer mode between the main memory and the peripheral devices that without passing
through the CPU. Using the DMA controller, data is transferred much faster.
DRAM (Dynamic RAM)
A most common type of computer memory. It usually uses one transistor and a capacitor to
represent a bit. As the development of technology, the memory type and specification used
in computer becomes variety, such as SDRAM, DDR SDRAM, and RDRAM. For further
instruction, please see the table below:
Dynamic RAM (DRAM) Memory Technologies
Type
FPM (60,70ns)
EDO (50,60,70ns)
SDRAM (66MHz)
SDRAM (100MHz)
SDRAM (133MHz)
RDRAM (Direct Rambus)
DDR SDRAM (100MHz)
DDR SDRAM (133MHz)
* Memory channel width (64 bits started with 75MHz Pentium)
Source: Computer Desktop Encyclopedia
First Used
Clock Rate
Bus* Width
1990
25MHz
1994
40MHz
1996
66MHz
1998
100MHz
1999
133MHz
1999
400MHz
2000
100MHz
2000
133MHz
G-2
Peak
Volts
Bandwidth
64 bits
200 MBps
5v
64 bits
320 MBps
5v
64 bits
528 MBps
3.3v
64 bits
800 MBps
3.3v
64 bits
1.1 GBps
3.3v
16 bits
1.6 GBps
2.5v
64 bits
1.6 GBps
3.3v
64 bits
2.1 GBps
3.3v

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