���������� Communication and Networking Riser (CNR)The CNR connector is the interface between the motherboard and the CNR board. The connector provides all of the necessary signals to support several different configurations of audio, modem, and/or LAN subsystems in the system
���������� EISA busThis file is intended to provide a basic functional overview of the EISA Bus, so that hobbyists and amateurs can design their own EISA compatible cards.
���������� ElectrocoinThe Electrocoin standard was introduced before JAMMA (Japanese Arcade Machine Manufacturers Association) to allow various games to be connected to generic cabinets such as Silverline and Goliaths.
���������� FireWire (IEEE1394) bus interfaceDefined by IEEE 1394-1995 standard as a serial data transfer protocol and interconnection system. Also known as iLink (Sony) or Lynx. Often implemented in consumer electronics devices, digital video cameras, VCRs, some other multimedia hardware and computers.
���������� Mini PCI busMini PCI is an alternate PCI implementation designed for small form factor. It´s specification is a sub-set of PCI standard using 100 pin (Type I/II) or 124 pin (Type III) connector.
���������� PC/104 busPC/104 is a compact version of the ISA bus. PC/104 is intended for specialized embedded computing environments where applications depend on reliable data acquisition despite an often extreme environment.
���������� PCI busThe PCI Bus is a high performance bus for interconnecting chips, expansion boards, and processor/memory subsystems.
���������� USBUSB (Universal Serial Bus) designed to connect peripherals such as mice, keyboards, scanners, digital cameras, printers, hard disks, and networking components to PC. It becames standard connection method for scanners, digital cameras and for some printers.
���������� VMEbusVMEbus is a computer bus standard originally developed for the Motorola 68000 line of CPUs, but later widely used for many applications.
���������� NuBusNuBus is a 32-bit parallel computer bus, originally developed at MIT as a part of the NuMachine workstation project, and eventually used by Apple Computer and NeXT Computer.
���������� ECBbusThe ECB-bus was defined in 1984 by the german company KONTRON. It was defined of 100x160mm-europa-card and used 2x32 pins (row a and c). Later the third (middle) row of pins was defined for 16-bit-systems. Such bus uses all 3x32pins.