1 / 14

IEEE 1394, USB, and AGP High Speed Transfer

IEEE 1394, USB, and AGP High Speed Transfer. AGP. Accelerated Graphics Port Intended to create a faster means of retrieving data from the computer to the graphics card Simply enhanced from the PCI architecture Designed by Intel Corporation. AGP – Purpose Of Design.

Télécharger la présentation

IEEE 1394, USB, and AGP High Speed Transfer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IEEE 1394, USB, and AGPHigh Speed Transfer

  2. AGP • Accelerated Graphics Port • Intended to create a faster means of retrieving data from the computer to the graphics card • Simply enhanced from the PCI architecture • Designed by Intel Corporation

  3. AGP – Purpose Of Design • As technology progresses and overall demand increases, the demand from the user for fast and smooth flowing graphics also increases • Software demands are continuously growing • 3D Rendering has a high demand for memory bandwidth

  4. AGP vs. PCI • Enhanced from PCI architecture running at 66 MHz • Four Enhancements Made: • Deeply Pipelined memory read and write operations, fully hiding memory access latency • Demultiplexing of address and data on bus to allow almost 100% bus efficiency • New AC timing in the 3.3v electrical specification that provides for one or two data transfers per 66-MHz clock cycle, allowing for data throughput in excess of 500 MB/s • A new low voltage electrical specification that allows four data transfers per 66MHz clock cycle, providing real data throughput of up to 1 GB/s Intel Corporation (AGP Interface Specification)

  5. AGP vs. PCI • Architecture of AGP is identical to PCI except for the four enhancements of AGP • AGP’s work on an independent bus than that of the PCI ports • The physical make-up of PCI cards and AGP cards are not interchangeable

  6. IEEE 1394 • Created by Apple in 1986 • FireWire • IEEE standard 1394 created 1995 • High speed data transfer • Up to 400 mb/s • Working on 1 gb/s • Much faster than IDE and SCSI

  7. IEEE 1394 – Cable Design • 6 wires • Two power • Two twisted pairs

  8. IEEE 1394 – Limitations • 1394 Cable can not exceed 4.5 meters • Can be increased • 63 1394 devices can be connected in a chain • Non-cyclical

  9. IEEE 1394 – Application • Video • Audio • Hard Drives • DVD

  10. USB • Universal Serial Bus • Designed by Intel Corporation • Originally Designed for: • Connection of PC to Telephone • Ease-Of-Use • Port Expansion

  11. USB 2 • USB 2 was born as a modification of the original USB architecture • Designed to deal with the increasing technology demand and increasing need to deal with large amounts of data • Digital Media is a perfect example of increasing needs to deal with large amounts of data due to high resolution pictures and movies which create high density files

  12. USB 1 vs. USB 2 • USB 1 • Minimum transfer rate of 1.5 MB/s • Maximum transfer rate of 12 MB/s • USB 2 • Maximum transfer rate of 480 MB/s • USB 2 has a maximum transfer rate 40x faster than USB 1!

  13. USB - Connectors • Connector A is commonly located upstream from the host • It usually connects to the PC • Connector B is commonly located downstream from the USB device • It usually connects to the peripheral

  14. USB – So Much More • There is a much more complex system behind USB than what has been shown here • USB often supplies its peripherals with its own power supply, indicating a sophisticated electrical system • Most of the concepts are out of our comprehension at this point • These concepts can be found in the USB Specification found at WWW.INTEL.COM

More Related