bus
bus / bəs/ • n. (pl. bus·es or bus·ses) 1. a large motor vehicle carrying passengers by road, esp. one serving the public on a fixed route and for a fare: [as adj.] a bus service. 2. Comput. a distinct set of conductors carrying data and control signals within a computer system, to which pieces of equipment may be connected in parallel.• v. (bus·es, bused, bus·ing or bus·ses,bus·sed, bus·sing) 1. [tr.] (often be bused) transport in a communal road vehicle: managerial staff was bused in and out of the factory. ∎ transport (a child of one race) to a school where another race is predominant, in an attempt to promote racial integration.2. [tr.] remove (dirty tableware) from a table in a restaurant or cafeteria: I'd never bused so many dishes in one night.
bus
There are a number of widely used proprietary bus systems, such as Digital Equipment's Unibus and Intel's Multibus. There is also a widely used instrumentation bus standard, referred to as IEEE-488 or as GPIB, general-purpose interface bus. For microprocessors there are a number of standardized bus systems, one of the first to be widely used being the VME bus.
The rapid development of the home computer has led to the introduction of several generations of bus systems of ever increasing speeds. Examples are ISA bus, PCI bus, AGP, USB, and Firewire.