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Newer page: version 5 Last edited on Thursday, July 7, 2005 6:03:05 am by IanMcDonald
Older page: version 4 Last edited on Wednesday, July 6, 2005 8:56:33 pm by PhilMurray Revert
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
 The major [Bus] in use by modern computers as specified by [PCI-SIG|http://www.pcisig.org]. Available in 32bit or 64bit and 33Mhz or 66Mhz flavours. Now superseeded by PCI-X and PCI-Express. 
  
 PCI-X is available in 64bit and 66, 100, 133, 266[2] and 533Mhz[2] variants. Mostly only used in servers for various peripheral cards that require high bandwidth like RAID, Gigabit Ethernet and Fibre Channel HBA cards. 
  
-PCI-Express does away with the traditional [Bus] architecture of PCI and replaces it with a packet-based point-to-point architecture. Each slot is available as a number of full-duplex lanes from 1 to 32 combined to a form link that's connected to a switch. Each lane is capable of transmitting 2.5Gbps in each direction. 16x slots, at 40Gbps, are being used to replace [AGP] slots for graphics adapters. PCI-Express is backwards compatible with PCI from a software point of view, so an [OperatingSystem] does not need any modification to support PCI-Express hardware. 
+PCI-Express does away with the traditional [Bus] architecture of PCI and replaces it with a packet-based point-to-point architecture. Each slot is available as a number of full-duplex lanes from 1 to 32 combined to form a link that's connected to a switch. Each lane is capable of transmitting 2.5Gbps in each direction. 16x slots, at 40Gbps, are being used to replace [AGP] slots for graphics adapters. PCI-Express is backwards compatible with PCI from a software point of view, so an [OperatingSystem] does not need any modification to support PCI-Express hardware. 
  
 [2]: Since version 2.0 of the PCI-X specification