What does the "north of the northbridge" mean?
This is a very computer-related question. A northbridge is:
one of the two chips in the core logic chipset on a PC motherboard, the other being the southbridge.
This name, in itself, comes from its placement in a map of the chip's architecture. One example, also from Wikipedia, is this one:
Then, the "north of the northbridge" refers to the relative north in this map--the CPU and the memory, as referred to in your original source.
The article makes a few references to the northbridge and the southbridge. "The north of the northbridge" appears to mean the northernmost part of the object referred to as the "northbridge." So, it is akin to saying "the very top of the top part."
Here are all mentions of "bridge" in the article:
Let’s start with CPU and memory, the north of the northbridge: [graphic]
Down in the southbridge we have a number of other buses (e.g., PCIe, USB) and peripherals connected: [graphic]
Sadly the southbridge hosts some truly sluggish performers, for even main memory is blazing fast compared to hard drives.
I posted a full diagram showing both north and south bridges here if you’re interested.