The original super I/O chips communicated with the
central processing unit (CPU) via the
ISA bus. With the evolution away from ISA towards use of the
PCI bus, the Super I/O chip was often the biggest remaining reason for continuing inclusion of ISA on the motherboard. Later super I/O chips use the
LPC bus instead of ISA for communication with the central processing unit. This normally occurs through an LPC interface on the
Southbridge chip of the motherboard. Since Intel is replacing the LPC bus with the
eSPI bus, super I/O chips that connect to that bus have appeared on the market. Companies that make super I/O controllers include
Nuvoton (spun off from
Winbond), , Fintek Inc. ,ENE Tech. (for laptop) and
Microchip Technology (which bought SMSC™).
National Semiconductor used to make super I/O controllers but sold that business to Winbond at 2005, which already had a competing super I/O controller business. In 2008, Winbond then spun off its logic businesses to a wholly owned subsidiary, Nuvoton. SMSC made super I/O chips and then got acquired by Microchip Technology. == Common models ==