Computer mather board and its functions
. The motherboard is a printed circuit board and foundation of a computer that is the biggest board in a computer chassis. It allocates power and allows communication to and between the CPU, RAM, and all other computer hardware components.
- Motherboard overview.
- Motherboard components.
- Older motherboard components.
- Motherboard form factors and types.
- How many connections, ports, or slots are on a motherboard?
- How does a motherboard connect to a computer case?
- What was the first motherboard?
- Since there is a motherboard, is there a fatherboard?
- Where did the motherboard get its name?
- Is there a motherboard in a laptop, smartphone, and tablet?
- Related motherboard pages.
- Computer motherboard help and support.
Motherboard overview
A motherboard provides connectivity between the hardware components of a computer, like the processor (CPU), memory (RAM), hard drive, and video card. There are multiple types of motherboards, designed to fit different types and sizes of computers.
Each type of motherboard is designed to work with
specific types of processors and memory, so they are not capable of
working with every processor and type of memory. However, hard drives
are mostly universal and work with the majority of motherboards,
regardless of the type or brand.
Below is a picture of the ASUS
P5AD2-E motherboard with labels next to each of its major components.
Clicking on the image directs you to a larger and more detailed version.
Motherboard components
Below are links to pages with more details for each of
the motherboard components mentioned in the previous section. The links
are listed in clockwise order starting from the top-left corner of the
image. Components not labeled on the image above are found in sections
later on this page.
- Expansion slots (PCI Express, PCI, and AGP).
- 3-pin case fan connectors.
- Back pane connectors.
- Heat sink.
- 4-pin (P4) power connector.
- Inductor.
- Capacitor.
- CPU socket.
- Northbridge.
- Screw hole.
- Memory slot.
- Super I/O.
- Floppy connection.
- ATA / IDE disk drive primary connection.
- 24-pin ATX power supply connector.
- Serial ATA connections.
- Coin cell battery (CMOS backup battery).
- RAID.
- System panel connectors.
- FWH.
- Southbridge.
- Serial port connector.
- USB headers.
- Jumpers.
- Integrated circuit.
- 1394 headers.
- SPDIF.
- CD-IN.
Older motherboard components
The following list contains links to components that are
not shown in the picture above or were part of older computer
motherboards.
- BIOS
- Bus
- Cache memory
- Chipset
- Diode
- Dip switches
- Electrolytic
- Fuse
- Game port and MIDI header.
- Internal speaker
- Keyboard controller
- LCC
- Network header
- Obsolete expansion slots: AMR, CNR, EISA, ISA, and VESA.
- Obsolete memory slots: SIMM.
- Onboard LED
- Parallel port header
- PS/2 header
- Resistor
- RTC
- Serial port header
- Screw hole aka mounting hole.
- SCSI
- Solenoid
- Voltage regulator
- VRM (voltage regulator module).
Motherboard form factors and types
As computers advanced, so have motherboards. Below is a list of the various motherboard form factors and additional information about each, including ATX, which is the most common.
- AT
- ATX
- Baby AT
- BTX
- DTX
- LPX
- Full AT
- Full ATX
- microATX
- NLX
How many connections, ports, or slots are on a motherboard?
There is no set standard to how many connections, ports, or expansion slots
are on a motherboard. The best method of determining how many
connections, ports, or slots are available for your motherboard is to
look up the specifications contained in its documentation. If you've
lost or discarded your motherboard's documentation, you can often
download a free PDF version from the manufacturer's website.
How does a motherboard connect to a computer case?
A computer motherboard connects to a desktop computer case using standouts. Once the motherboard is attached to the case, all the other devices connect either to the motherboard itself or an installed expansion card.
What was the first motherboard?
The first motherboard is considered to be one used in the IBM Personal Computer, released in 1981.
At the time, IBM referred to it as a "planar" instead of a motherboard.
The IBM Personal Computer and the motherboard inside it would set the
standard for IBM-compatible computer hardware going forward.
Since there is a motherboard, is there a fatherboard?
No, there is no such thing as a fatherboard when referring to a computer. However, there is such a thing as a daughterboard.
Where did the motherboard get its name?
The daughterboards we mentioned in the previous section
are circuit boards that all plug into one larger central circuit board; a
motherboard. The smaller boards can be thought of as the main board's
"children," hence the name motherboard.
Is there a motherboard in a laptop, smartphone, and tablet?
Yes, although the board is often referred to as a "logic
board" and not a motherboard. The logic board is very similar to a
motherboard and operates the same way. However, because of size
requirements with most logic boards, the components like the processor
and RAM (in tablets and smartphones) are soldered onto the board. Also, because many of these devices have no upgrade options, there are no slots or sockets like a traditional computer motherboard
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