What Is a PC Bus? A Basic Definition
Reference
By
Scharon Harding
published
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A PC bus, also referred to as "the bus," is the path on the PC's motherboard to transfer data to and from the CPU and other PC components or PCs. This includes communication between software. For example, a PCIe (peripheral component interconnect express) expansion card, such as a graphics card (aka GPU aka video card), will send data to and from the PCIe bus.Â
There are numerous types of buses to accommodate different technologies. Below is a list of standard computer buses:
- eSATA (External SerialATA) - for transferring data between external hard drives and disk drives
- PCIe - for accessing PCIe expansion cards and certain M.2 SSDsÂ
- SATA (Serial ATA) - for accessing internal storage drives. Slower than PCIeÂ
- Thunderbolt - for accessing peripherals
- USB - for accessing peripherals
This article is part of the 3DTested Glossary.
Further reading:
- Dissecting the Modern Motherboard: Connectors, Ports & Chipsets Explained
- How to Buy the Right CPU
- Best Gaming CPUs
- Best (Non-Gaming) Performance CPUs
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