View allAll Photos Tagged CPUs
Déplacement de la ministre Najat VALLAUD-BELKACEM dans le Loiret, pour rencontrer les acteurs éducatifs de l’école primaire de Bou, pour un « café des parents » sur le thème des relations entre les parents et l’école à Chécy puis intervention au colloque annuel de la Conférence des présidents d’université sur le thème « Campus en mouvement » à Orléans, le mercredi 25 mai 2016.
Najat Vallaud-Belkacem est intervenue lors du colloque annuel de la Conférence des Présidents d’Université (CPU) qui s’est tenu à l’université d’Orléans, sur le thème « Campus en mouvement ». Au cours de son discours, la ministre a annoncé travailler sur la conception d’un plan pluriannuel pour accompagner l’enseignement supérieur vers les objectifs fixés dans la stratégie nationale STRANES.
- © Philippe DEVERNAY
Here we have 2x 186 processors and a 286. Very rare to find a 186 in a PC.
The 186 was a popular chip in other applications. Many versions have been developed in its history. Buyers could choose from CHMOS or HMOS, 8-bit or 16-bit versions, depending on what they needed. A CHMOS chip could run at twice the clock speed and at one fourth the power of the HMOS chip. In 1990, Intel came out with the Enhanced 186 family. They all shared a common core design. They had a 1-micron core design and ran at about 25MHz at 3 volts. The 80186 contained a high level of integration, with the system controller, interrupt controller, DMA controller and timing circuitry right on the CPU. Despite this, the 186 never really found itself in a personal computer.
One day whilst cleaning out my shed, I found this item. I thought is was interesting enough to take a photo of.
Whilst these items are not for sale, if anyone knows it's value, please send me a comment.
If anyone knows any background about the item, please send me a comment.
Photo taken with a Canon 30D in Macro mode. The lens was a 18-55 mm and a macro light was used. The item was placed into a light tent.
2009
Img_9984
The CPU was not connecting properly and the computer kept turning off. This it, with the heatsink and fan on top.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Your comments and favs are appreciated
The underside of a computer processor or CPU as most commonly named not in its natural habitat unfortunately.
At some point a giant came along and removed this thing from its happy home and here I am today taking photos of it like a barbarian.
This still functions if you want to purchase it.
Intel 950 CPU
Hand held focus stack
📷 Olympus EM1 Mkii
🔎 Olympus M.Zuiko 60mm Macro
⚡ Godox TT350
Meike 16mm extension tube
♻ CJ Diffuser.
Have a nice day.
Got an older Intel CPU die from ebay to look at under the microscope. Grinding/dissolving to expose a die from a CPU was too much trouble, so I found someone selling these that never made it to being packaged.
K6-2 CPU (not sure what speed), 32M ram. The actual ATSC board was a double-wide PCI board joined to an ISA board with a jumper.
Intel Pentium M 735 processor.
A central processing unit (CPU) is the electronic circuitry within a computer that carries out the instructions of a computer program by performing the basic arithmetic, logical, control and input/output (I/O) operations specified by the instructions.
Back in the day when I was a regular hardware hacker type, I had a spare ceramic 68000 CPU on my bench, a few years old and no longer state of the art by any means. For some reason, my soldering iron was turned up to 800F. With an evil gleam in my eye, I dropped some solder on the gold lid of the case and heated it until the thing smoked. The lid - much to my surprise - suddenly slid off. I kept it all these years, and this is a scan taken with an Epson 4870 scanner. If you have noticed the scratch at the bottom of the chip, all I can say is I didn't say I kept it carefully...
Maybe it's sleep deprevation talking, but I think my CPU graph is pretty.
I'm watching a system monitor while I wait for JUnit tests to run to make sure they don't take all 16GB of my RAM again. >.<