On 1999-01-18 PCBUILD-PersonalComputerHardwarediscussionList said:
>On Monday, January 18, 1999, Capt. Zyla <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>From time to time pcbuilders refer to the term FSB. What does it
>mean? >
>>John
>John - On the two occasions that I have seen this term used, it
>can either mean Free Software Business, i.e., one who sells
>computer-software-related services into a free market, (shareware
>distributors, contract programmers, 1-900 support vendors, support
>contractors, etc. which sometimes excludes shareware developers .
>Crynwr Software and Cygnus Support companies are just two companies
>that use this business model. OTOH, it can mean Functional
>System Block (FSB). Cell Function System Block is a trademark of
>VLSI Technology. This form of design reuse typically contains only
>digital logic. HTH. :-)
With respect to PCs, FSB usually stands for Front Side Bus, a term
spawned after Intel introduced the 100 MHZ PII. FSB usually refers to the
speed that the processor talks to the rest of the system, in the case of the
PII it is 66MHZ for processors up to and including the 333MHZ, and 100 MHZ
for the PIIs above. The FSB speed is having less and less of a significant
effect than in the past due to the L2 cache is systems now being part of the
CPU instead of having to be accessed through the out bus. The next line of
Intel processors will have FSB frequencies of 133 MHZ, some higher, I
believe 150 MHZ. The K7 from AMD will use a FSB speed of 200 MHZ, since it
uses the SLOT A interface, however this is getting off topic... Hope this
helped, TTYL
PCBUILD's List Owner's:
Bob Wright<[log in to unmask]>
Drew Dunn<[log in to unmask]>
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