Does this mean the 10Gbps+ network cards will be connected to the North bridge (or CPU directly) in the new motherboards. Thank you. Another great video😀
Generally network cards are chips on the motherboard rather than being part of the north bridge. However, that chip will most likely be directly connected to the North Bridige.
Computers haven't had north bridges for over 10 years. These days a PCI-e card will either connect directly to the CPU or via the chipset (not that it is a set any more) though current chipsets fill the role of what was the south bridge in the past. The north bridge disappeared with the advent of CPU's with internal memory controllers.
Please make a video on all protocols usage and where can we find thouse protocols on mother boards Like DDR, i2c, spi And also please make a video on data center server boards
In computer transfers, overhead refers to the extra work or data required to complete the actual data transfer itself. It's like the packaging and administrative tasks involved in sending a box. While necessary for a smooth transfer, the overhead doesn't contribute to the actual content being transferred. Thus, if your data connection has a 10% overhead, the maxium data use you will be able is send 90% since 10% is lost to overhead.
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Wow, thank you!
You have explained the motherboard chips and components very well, thank you.
Glad it helped
Well detailed, informative...thanks
Glad you liked it
Great work!!.. Much appreciated 👏👍
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deserves more likes, thank you.
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Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for your excellent presentation
Thanks very much and thanks for watching.
Very informative video... Thank you sir, I benefited a lot
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Does this mean the 10Gbps+ network cards will be connected to the North bridge (or CPU directly) in the new motherboards. Thank you. Another great video😀
Generally network cards are chips on the motherboard rather than being part of the north bridge. However, that chip will most likely be directly connected to the North Bridige.
Computers haven't had north bridges for over 10 years. These days a PCI-e card will either connect directly to the CPU or via the chipset (not that it is a set any more) though current chipsets fill the role of what was the south bridge in the past. The north bridge disappeared with the advent of CPU's with internal memory controllers.
A River of knowledge
Thanks very much.
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Nice super explained
Thank you 🙂
Please make a video on all protocols usage and where can we find thouse protocols on mother boards
Like DDR, i2c, spi
And also please make a video on data center server boards
Top channel
Thanks for watching.
When you say USB 3 ports are connected to the northbridge it's just the ports and not the controller or roothub right?
Yes sorry if that was not clear. The root hub is connected to the northbridge. All the ports communicate with the roothub.
informative !!!
Thanks for watching.
for the example of the four slots utilize a total of 40 lanes ?? how u get the 40 lanes ??
there are 2x 16 lane PCI express (32) and 2x 4 PCI express lanes (8) making a total of 40 in the example.
What is "overhead"?
In computer transfers, overhead refers to the extra work or data required to complete the actual data transfer itself. It's like the packaging and administrative tasks involved in sending a box. While necessary for a smooth transfer, the overhead doesn't contribute to the actual content being transferred. Thus, if your data connection has a 10% overhead, the maxium data use you will be able is send 90% since 10% is lost to overhead.
Thank you for your excellent presentation
Thanks very much.