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Originally posted by drSeehas View PostHm, the AT 16-bit slot was only an extension to the 8-bit slot.
My first videocard from ATI could emulate MDA, Hercules or CGA selectable by DIP switches.
You see occasional references to "8 bit ISA" for the original PC bus connectors but I don't think that was ever part of the "ISA" spec.
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Originally posted by bridgman View Post... the only thing older than ISA would be the 8-bit bus slots on the original PC (ISA was a 16-bit version of that IIRC).
My first videocard from ATI could emulate MDA, Hercules or CGA selectable by DIP switches.
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Originally posted by drSeehas View PostWhich slot is older than an ISA slot (and IBM PC compatible)?
I know, the Apple II had slots too.
EDIT -- missed your qualifier about IBM PC compatible, the only thing older than ISA would be the 8-bit bus slots on the original PC (ISA was a 16-bit version of that IIRC).Last edited by bridgman; 09 December 2014, 11:03 AM.
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Ah, AGP... it is not that old. Oh, folks, don't make old Grampa come up with his ISA slots. Or VLB. Or things even older.
The sad thing is that a lot of interfaces are obsoleted way too fast. There are still cards, periphery that work fine for a job and that are still in use but vendors just ignore it. I am very glad that a couple of these AM1 boards still feature serial (COM) and parallel (LPT) interfaces. I also still got so many good PCI cards around but I have little use yet for PCIe besides GPUs.
And IDE and floppy interfaces are nearly extinct, and you can't buy FDD controllers anywhere (besides some USB2FDDs). I actually had to use 3 1/2 just recently to fetch scientific data from an old box.
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I use Pentium 4 2.4 Ghz on media server, and with half-year not upgraded debian testing, the built-in 915 works very well on 16:9 fullhd TV (its 845 something I think).
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Originally posted by drSeehas View PostThis is an AGP slot.
And I've once forgotten about motherboards that have both a PCIe x16 (I'm thinking 1.0) and AGP slots... Times have gone way too quickly.
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Anyone notice a 20-pin connector placed near the I/O ports? Makes me think of using PicoPSU for that particular motherboard. And why is the battery mounted near the PCI Reversed Express slot?
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