3. General Description The application environment for the AT Attachment is any computer which uses an AT Bus or 40-pin ATA interface. The AT Bus is a widely used and implemented interface for which a variety of peripherals have been manufactured. As a means of reducing size and cost, a class of products has emerged which embed the controller functionality in the drive. These new products utilize the AT Bus fixed disk interface protocol, and a subset of the AT bus. Because of their compatibility with existing AT hardware and software this interface quickly became a de facto industry standard. The purpose of the ATA standard is to define the de facto implementations. Software in the Operating System dispatches I/O (Input/Output) requests via the AT Bus to peripherals which respond to direct commands. 3.1 Structure This standard relies upon specifications of the mechanical and electrical characteristics of the AT Bus and a subset of the AT Bus specifically developed for the direct attachment of peripherals. Also defined are the methods by which commands are directed to peripherals, the contents of registers and the method of data transfers.