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ATA (AT Attachment) is the primary standard for connecting storage to PC's. ATA replaced earlier technologies such as MFM, RLL, and ESDI. ATA currently competes with SCSI. ATA is a specification for attaching hard drives to the AT bus. The AT specification has been extended to include other storage, such as CD/DVD drives, tape drives, and Zip drives with the Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface (ATAPI) additions to the specification. ATA is also known as IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics). Parallel ATA CablesParallel ATA cables originally had 40 wires. With the introduction of ATA-5, parallel ATA cables with 80 wires became standard. Only 40 wires are used to carry signals. The additional 40 wires exist to provide a ground wire for each signal wire. These grounding wires enable the ATA subsystem to operate at higher speeds with greater reliability.
ATA Masters and SlavesEach ATA bus supports two storage devices. The first storage device is called the Master and the second storage device is termed the Slave. There are two methods for configuring which device is the master and which is the slave: drive jumpers and cable select.
Parallel ATA vs. Serial ATAAll versions of ATA up until ATA-7 in 2004 utilized parallel transfer of data from the motherboard to the drive controller built onto the disk. The ATA-7 specification introduced Serial ATA. The most obvious change with Serial ATA is the difference in drive cables. Other differences include:
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