Bit-serial architecture
id:
bit-serial-architecture-178-6894168
title:
Bit-serial architecture
text:
In computer architecture, bit-serial architectures send data one bit at a time, along a single wire, in contrast to bit-parallel word architectures, in which data values are sent all bits or a word at once along a group of wires. All digital computers built before 1951, and most of the early massive parallel processing machines used a bit-serial architecture—they were serial computers. Bit-serial architectures were developed for digital signal processing in the 1960s through 1980s, including eff
brand slug:
wiki
category slug:
encyclopedia
description:
Computational system in which data are sent one bit at a time down a wire
original url:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit-serial_architecture
date created:
2008-04-28T01:35:20Z
date modified:
2024-09-04T18:53:54Z
main entity:
{"identifier":"Q4918661","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q4918661"}
image:
fields total:
13
integrity:
15