The IEEE 1394a specification enables hot-pluggable high volume connections to PC peripherals such as printers and hard disk drives, multimedia appliances, and consumer electronics devices such as game consoles and video cameras.
The IEEE 1394 high-speed serial bus (known as ‘Firewire™’) is a leading PCI peer-to-peer interconnect system and is widely acclaimed as the primary interface for digital audio and video applications. VIA Mobile360 Heavy Equipment Safety SystemĪ complete small package single chip PCI solution for high-speed, low power seamless plug and play connections to the latest IEEE 1394 enabled devices.VIA Mobile360 M800 Video Telematics System.FireWire can work with the latest internal computer bus standard, Peripheral Component Interconnect ( PCI ), but higher data transfer rates may require special design considerations to minimize undesired buffering for transfer rate mismatches. Small Computer System Interface offers a high data transfer rate (up to 40 megabytes per second) but requires address preassignment and a device terminator on the last device in a chain. It's a less expensive technology but data transfer is limited to 12 Mbps (million bits per second). Up to 16 devices can be connected in a single chain, each with the 4.5 meter maximum (before signal attenuation begins to occur) so theoretically you could have a device as far away as 72 meters from the computer.Īnother new approach to connecting devices, the Universal Serial Bus ( USB ), provides the same "hot plug" capability as the 1394 standard. The 1394 standard requires that a device be within 4.5 meters of the bus socket. For multimedia applications, this kind of data transfer reduces the need for buffering and helps ensure a continuous presentation for the viewer. Isochronous data transfer ensures that data flows at a pre-set rate so that an application can handle it in a timed way. Asynchronous is for traditional load-and-store applications where data transfer can be initiated and an application interrupted as a given length of data arrives in a buffer. IEEE 1394 provides two types of data transfer: asynchronous and isochronous. A 64-bit device address allows a great deal of flexibility in configuring devices in chains and trees from a single socket. The serial bus functions as though devices were in slots within the computer sharing a common memory space. Each of these interfaces can handle any of the possible data rates and change from one to another as needed. The cable interface supports 100, 200, or 400 megabits per second. The backplane bus supports 12.5, 25, or 50 megabits per second data transfer. A simple bridge connects the two environments. There are two levels of interface in IEEE 1394, one for the backplane bus within the computer and another for the point-to-point interface between device and computer on the serial cable. With a computer equipped with the socket and bus capability, any device (for example, a video camera) can be plugged in while the computer is running.
Because IEEE 1394 is a peer-to-peer interface, one camcorder can dub to another without being plugged into a computer. The first products to be introduced with FireWire include digital camera s, digital video disks ( DVD s), digital video tapes, digital camcorders, and music systems.
In time, IEEE 1394 implementations are expected to replace and consolidate today's serial and parallel interfaces, including Centronics parallel, RS-232C, and Small Computer System Interface ( SCSI ). The ability to chain devices together in a number of different ways without terminators or complicated set-up requirements.Hot-plug and plug and play capability without disrupting your computer.A very high-speed rate of data transfer that will accommodate multimedia applications (100 and 200 megabits per second today with much higher rates later).A thin serial cable rather than the thicker parallel cable you now use to your printer, for example.A simple common plug-in serial connector on the back of your computer and on many different types of peripheral devices.Two popular implementations of IEEE 1394 are Apple's FireWire and Sony's i.LINK. Many peripheral devices now come equipped to meet IEEE 1394. The standard describes a serial bus or pathway between one or more peripheral devices and your computer's microprocessor. IEEE 1394 provides a single plug-and-socket connection on which up to 63 devices can be attached with data transfer speeds up to 400 Mbps ( megabit s per second). IEEE 1394, High Performance Serial Bus, is an electronics standard for connecting devices to your personal computer.