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Wikipedia: Address bus
Address bus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

An address bus is (part of) a computer bus, used by CPUss or DMA-capable units for communicating the physical addresses of computer memory elements/locations that the requesting unit wants to access (read/write).

The width of an address bus, along with the size of addressable memory elements, determines how much memory can be accessed. For example, a 16-bit wide address bus (commonly used in the 8-bit processors of the 1970s and early 1980s) reaches across 2 to the power of 16 = 65,536 = 64K memory locations, whereas a 32-bit address bus (common in today's PC processors) can address 4,294,967,296 = 4G locations.

In most microcomputers the addressable elements are 8-bit bytes (so a "K" in that case is equal to a "KB", i.e. a kilobyte), while there are also many examples of computers with larger "chunks" of data as their minimum physically addressable elements, notably mainframess, supercomputers, and some workstation CPUs.


  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 
Modified by Geona