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Please remember to remove all capacitors before heating a board. The first time I ever took chips off a board I did not realize this and some exploded / squirt toxic fluids. You do not want that to happen.

 

Wear gloves and remove them by bending them back and fourth until the metal leads break. Gently use pliers if you cannot reach them.

 

Also, never open a power supply! Those large capacitors can carry enough power to kill you even after years on the shelf.

All of the SPI signals are on easy-to-solder test points on the back of the mainboard.

 

This is one of the earliest experiments I did after buying my DSi and opening it for the first time. I was trying to see whether the firmware was attached to the internal SPI bus, like it was on the DS.

  

This Pentium I was mounted on a board to the notebooks mainboard. You would never see anything like this in today's notebooks any more...

Matrox MGA-2164W (Millennium II) Graphic Card.

 

Core: 2164W (Mistral) 62/66MHz 64bit

Memory: 4/8MB(16MB max) WRAM Bus: 62/66MHz 64bit AGP1x / PCI

Made: NEC 0,35 µm

This is the PCI 8MB - 62MHz Version.

Relase Date: 1997

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Embedded Electronics Starter Kit from GHI Electronics

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit

www.ghielectronics.com/catalog/product/297

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit is the first commercially available .NET Gadgeteer-compatible kit. it includes everything necessary for educators, hobbyists and even professionals. Embedded development is fast & easy (FEZ) thanks to .NET Micro Framework, .NET Gadgeteer and the numerous GHI value added features such as WiFi and USB Host.

 

The kit includes:

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard

Display T35 Module (3.5" with touchscreen)

USB Client DP Module (with USB cable)

Camera Module

2x Multicolor LED Module (DaisyLink)

2x Button Module

Ethernet J11D Module

SD Card Module

USB Host Module

Extender Module

Joystick Module

10cm IDC cables (included with modules).

Assorted IDC Cable Pack:

4x 5cm IDC cables

3x 20cm IDC cables

1x 50cm IDC cable

Reusable Plastic Storage Box

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard is a .NET Gadgeteer-compatible mainboard based on GHI Electronics' EMX module. This makes FEZ Spider Mainboard the most feature-full .NET Gadgeteer compatible device in the market. It contains all of .NET Micro Framework core features and adds many exclusive features, such as USB host, WiFi and RLP (loading native code). All these features combine to provide a rapid prototyping platform.

 

Key Features:

 

14 .NET Gadgeteer compatible sockets that include these types: X, Y, A, C, D, E, F, H, I, K, O, P, S, T, U, R, G, B and Z.

Configurable on-board LED

Configuration switches.

Based on GHI Electronics EMX module

72MHz 32-bit ARM7 processor

4.5 MB Flash

16 MB RAM

LCD controller

Full TCP/IP Stack with SSL, HTTP, TCP, UDP, DHCP

Ethernet, WiFi driver and PPP ( GPRS/ 3G modems) and DPWS

USB host

USB Device with specialized libraries to emulate devices like thumb-drive, virtual COM (CDC), mouse, keyboard

76 GPIO Pin

2 SPI (8/16bit)

I2C

4 UART

2 CAN Channels

7 10-bit Analog Inputs

10-bit Analog Output (capable of WAV audio playback)

4-bit SD/MMC Memory card interface

6 PWM

OneWire interface (available on any IO)

Built-in Real Time Clock (RTC) with the suitable crystal

Processor register access

OutputCompare for generating waveforms with high accuracy

RLP allowing users to load native code (C/Assembly) for real-time requirements

Extended double-precision math class

FAT File System

Cryptography (AES and XTEA)

Low power and hibernate support

In-field update (from SD, network or other)

Dimensions: W 2.25" x L 2.05" x H 0.5"

 

Power

 

Low power and hibernate modes

Active power consumption 160 mA

Idle power consumption 120 mA

Hibernate power consumption 40 mA

 

Enviromental:

 

Requires .NET Gadgeteer standard red power modules.

RoHS compliant /Lead-free compliant

 

Most EMX software features are GHI exclusive, see software documentation for details.

 

For more information about .NET Gadgeteer visit:

www.netmf.com/gadgeteer/

 

Photograph taken by Michael Kappel

www.MichaelKappel.com

 

Display T35 Module (3.5" with touchscreen)

Embedded Electronics Starter Kit from GHI Electronics

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit

www.ghielectronics.com/catalog/product/297

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit is the first commercially available .NET Gadgeteer-compatible kit. it includes everything necessary for educators, hobbyists and even professionals. Embedded development is fast & easy (FEZ) thanks to .NET Micro Framework, .NET Gadgeteer and the numerous GHI value added features such as WiFi and USB Host.

 

The kit includes:

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard

Display T35 Module (3.5" with touchscreen)

USB Client DP Module (with USB cable)

Camera Module

2x Multicolor LED Module (DaisyLink)

2x Button Module

Ethernet J11D Module

SD Card Module

USB Host Module

Extender Module

Joystick Module

10cm IDC cables (included with modules).

Assorted IDC Cable Pack:

4x 5cm IDC cables

3x 20cm IDC cables

1x 50cm IDC cable

Reusable Plastic Storage Box

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard is a .NET Gadgeteer-compatible mainboard based on GHI Electronics' EMX module. This makes FEZ Spider Mainboard the most feature-full .NET Gadgeteer compatible device in the market. It contains all of .NET Micro Framework core features and adds many exclusive features, such as USB host, WiFi and RLP (loading native code). All these features combine to provide a rapid prototyping platform.

 

Key Features:

 

14 .NET Gadgeteer compatible sockets that include these types: X, Y, A, C, D, E, F, H, I, K, O, P, S, T, U, R, G, B and Z.

Configurable on-board LED

Configuration switches.

Based on GHI Electronics EMX module

72MHz 32-bit ARM7 processor

4.5 MB Flash

16 MB RAM

LCD controller

Full TCP/IP Stack with SSL, HTTP, TCP, UDP, DHCP

Ethernet, WiFi driver and PPP ( GPRS/ 3G modems) and DPWS

USB host

USB Device with specialized libraries to emulate devices like thumb-drive, virtual COM (CDC), mouse, keyboard

76 GPIO Pin

2 SPI (8/16bit)

I2C

4 UART

2 CAN Channels

7 10-bit Analog Inputs

10-bit Analog Output (capable of WAV audio playback)

4-bit SD/MMC Memory card interface

6 PWM

OneWire interface (available on any IO)

Built-in Real Time Clock (RTC) with the suitable crystal

Processor register access

OutputCompare for generating waveforms with high accuracy

RLP allowing users to load native code (C/Assembly) for real-time requirements

Extended double-precision math class

FAT File System

Cryptography (AES and XTEA)

Low power and hibernate support

In-field update (from SD, network or other)

Dimensions: W 2.25" x L 2.05" x H 0.5"

 

Power

 

Low power and hibernate modes

Active power consumption 160 mA

Idle power consumption 120 mA

Hibernate power consumption 40 mA

 

Enviromental:

 

Requires .NET Gadgeteer standard red power modules.

RoHS compliant /Lead-free compliant

 

Most EMX software features are GHI exclusive, see software documentation for details.

 

For more information about .NET Gadgeteer visit:

www.netmf.com/gadgeteer/

 

Photograph taken by Michael Kappel

www.MichaelKappel.com

 

TinyCLR Support

www.tinyclr.com/support/

 

Embedded Electronics Starter Kit from GHI Electronics

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit

www.ghielectronics.com/catalog/product/297

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit is the first commercially available .NET Gadgeteer-compatible kit. it includes everything necessary for educators, hobbyists and even professionals. Embedded development is fast & easy (FEZ) thanks to .NET Micro Framework, .NET Gadgeteer and the numerous GHI value added features such as WiFi and USB Host.

 

The kit includes:

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard

Display T35 Module (3.5" with touchscreen)

USB Client DP Module (with USB cable)

Camera Module

2x Multicolor LED Module (DaisyLink)

2x Button Module

Ethernet J11D Module

SD Card Module

USB Host Module

Extender Module

Joystick Module

10cm IDC cables (included with modules).

Assorted IDC Cable Pack:

4x 5cm IDC cables

3x 20cm IDC cables

1x 50cm IDC cable

Reusable Plastic Storage Box

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard is a .NET Gadgeteer-compatible mainboard based on GHI Electronics' EMX module. This makes FEZ Spider Mainboard the most feature-full .NET Gadgeteer compatible device in the market. It contains all of .NET Micro Framework core features and adds many exclusive features, such as USB host, WiFi and RLP (loading native code). All these features combine to provide a rapid prototyping platform.

 

Key Features:

 

14 .NET Gadgeteer compatible sockets that include these types: X, Y, A, C, D, E, F, H, I, K, O, P, S, T, U, R, G, B and Z.

Configurable on-board LED

Configuration switches.

Based on GHI Electronics EMX module

72MHz 32-bit ARM7 processor

4.5 MB Flash

16 MB RAM

LCD controller

Full TCP/IP Stack with SSL, HTTP, TCP, UDP, DHCP

Ethernet, WiFi driver and PPP ( GPRS/ 3G modems) and DPWS

USB host

USB Device with specialized libraries to emulate devices like thumb-drive, virtual COM (CDC), mouse, keyboard

76 GPIO Pin

2 SPI (8/16bit)

I2C

4 UART

2 CAN Channels

7 10-bit Analog Inputs

10-bit Analog Output (capable of WAV audio playback)

4-bit SD/MMC Memory card interface

6 PWM

OneWire interface (available on any IO)

Built-in Real Time Clock (RTC) with the suitable crystal

Processor register access

OutputCompare for generating waveforms with high accuracy

RLP allowing users to load native code (C/Assembly) for real-time requirements

Extended double-precision math class

FAT File System

Cryptography (AES and XTEA)

Low power and hibernate support

In-field update (from SD, network or other)

Dimensions: W 2.25" x L 2.05" x H 0.5"

 

Power

 

Low power and hibernate modes

Active power consumption 160 mA

Idle power consumption 120 mA

Hibernate power consumption 40 mA

 

Enviromental:

 

Requires .NET Gadgeteer standard red power modules.

RoHS compliant /Lead-free compliant

 

Most EMX software features are GHI exclusive, see software documentation for details.

 

For more information about .NET Gadgeteer visit:

www.netmf.com/gadgeteer/

 

Photograph taken by Michael Kappel

www.MichaelKappel.com

 

Diamond Viper V550 with Nvidia Riva TNT.

PCI Interface, 16MB SDRAM, first generation of Nvidia chips.

 

Relase Date: 1998

 

The RIVA TNT, codenamed NV4, is a 2D, video, and 3D graphics accelerator chip for PCs that was manufactured by Nvidia. The TNT was designed as a follow up to the RIVA 128 and a response to 3Dfx's introduction of the Voodoo2. It added a second pixel pipeline, practically doubling rendering speed, and used considerably faster memory. Unlike the Voodoo2 (but like the slower Matrox G200) it also added support for a 32-bit (truecolor) pixel format, 24-bit Z-buffer in 3D mode, an 8-bit stencil buffer and support for 1024×1024 pixels textures. Improved texture filtering techniques, partially assisted by newly added trilinear filtering, dramatically improved image quality compared to the TNT's predecessor. It also added support for up to 16 MiB of SDR SDRAM. TNT was a single chip solution.

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

Rapid Prototyping for Production and Performance: Gadgeteer workshop at the Junction 2 in Cambridge 4/8/11

 

To test out the amazing work Tom Bartindale acheived during his current internship with Stuart Taylor building Gadgeteer modules to link the Gadgeteer prototyping platform with DMX and MIDI Tom, Stuart, and Nic organised a one day hands-on workshop involving hardware engineers, programmers, musicians, DJs, and event production folk at The Junction. It was amazing. We were using the new GHI FEZ Spider Mainboard due to ship at the end of September, plus sonar range finders, the GHI USB Client DP Module for power, Tom's new DMX/MIDI modules, LEDs, cameras, joysticks, RGB sensors, a wee touch screen display, xbee, and, of course, buttons!

 

I think Tom's planning to write the event up as a tech report or blog post. In the meantime if you want to get a feel for what it is like to control huge expensive complex theatre lighting systems with tiny Gadgeteer modules try the Bible: 1 Samuel 17:40-50!

 

(PS Sorry the photos are so blurred - it was dark)

This is the Gateway M465-E laptop that I disassembled at work to replace the DC adapter. All the parts are here except for some screws I have corralled on a different desk.

 

I've been tagged, so let's get on with it! 9 things about me:

 

1. I'm female, though most folks online think I'm male - in Flickr because of my interest in cars and in real life because my mother chose the Irish male spelling Kerry. Sok, though because I am a tomboy at heart!

 

2. After God and family, my loves are computers/technology, photography, cars (exotics, classics, tuners), and music.

 

3. I'm a perfectionist, but not in all things. A messy desk or cluttered room doesn't bother me, but an unsolvable problem, a cell phone without the contacts listed last name, first name, documents done in all caps, bad spelling / grammar and start menus with more than 10 folders drive me bonkers.

 

4. I have a photographic memory that is 95% reliable. Numbers, usernames/passwords, watching someone do a task on the computer, etc. It helped me get an A on the DS game Brain Academy.

 

5. I've been through or to at least half of the 50 states, but have only been to Aruba, Mexico and the Grand Caymans outside the continental US.

 

6. I love to write. I'm good at technical writing, but I enjoy fiction (I'm terrible at it) poetry and other creative writing.

 

7. I'm currently taking 2 six week online classes - Photo Basics 2 and Poetry.

 

8. I've almost died 4 times in my life...once nearly getting hit by a car as a child, twice nearly drowning as a child and as an adult, and most recently by losing control of my car after the tire struck something and ending up facing north and travelling south on Florida's Turnpike.

 

9. I'm a people pleaser and tend to mimic my surroundings, which is why I was born and grew up in Massachusetts but I have a slight southern accent after living in FL since I was 12.

Embedded Electronics Starter Kit from GHI Electronics

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit

www.ghielectronics.com/catalog/product/297

 

FEZ Spider Starter Kit is the first commercially available .NET Gadgeteer-compatible kit. it includes everything necessary for educators, hobbyists and even professionals. Embedded development is fast & easy (FEZ) thanks to .NET Micro Framework, .NET Gadgeteer and the numerous GHI value added features such as WiFi and USB Host.

 

The kit includes:

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard

Display T35 Module (3.5" with touchscreen)

USB Client DP Module (with USB cable)

Camera Module

2x Multicolor LED Module (DaisyLink)

2x Button Module

Ethernet J11D Module

SD Card Module

USB Host Module

Extender Module

Joystick Module

10cm IDC cables (included with modules).

Assorted IDC Cable Pack:

4x 5cm IDC cables

3x 20cm IDC cables

1x 50cm IDC cable

Reusable Plastic Storage Box

 

FEZ Spider Mainboard is a .NET Gadgeteer-compatible mainboard based on GHI Electronics' EMX module. This makes FEZ Spider Mainboard the most feature-full .NET Gadgeteer compatible device in the market. It contains all of .NET Micro Framework core features and adds many exclusive features, such as USB host, WiFi and RLP (loading native code). All these features combine to provide a rapid prototyping platform.

 

Key Features:

 

14 .NET Gadgeteer compatible sockets that include these types: X, Y, A, C, D, E, F, H, I, K, O, P, S, T, U, R, G, B and Z.

Configurable on-board LED

Configuration switches.

Based on GHI Electronics EMX module

72MHz 32-bit ARM7 processor

4.5 MB Flash

16 MB RAM

LCD controller

Full TCP/IP Stack with SSL, HTTP, TCP, UDP, DHCP

Ethernet, WiFi driver and PPP ( GPRS/ 3G modems) and DPWS

USB host

USB Device with specialized libraries to emulate devices like thumb-drive, virtual COM (CDC), mouse, keyboard

76 GPIO Pin

2 SPI (8/16bit)

I2C

4 UART

2 CAN Channels

7 10-bit Analog Inputs

10-bit Analog Output (capable of WAV audio playback)

4-bit SD/MMC Memory card interface

6 PWM

OneWire interface (available on any IO)

Built-in Real Time Clock (RTC) with the suitable crystal

Processor register access

OutputCompare for generating waveforms with high accuracy

RLP allowing users to load native code (C/Assembly) for real-time requirements

Extended double-precision math class

FAT File System

Cryptography (AES and XTEA)

Low power and hibernate support

In-field update (from SD, network or other)

Dimensions: W 2.25" x L 2.05" x H 0.5"

 

Power

 

Low power and hibernate modes

Active power consumption 160 mA

Idle power consumption 120 mA

Hibernate power consumption 40 mA

 

Enviromental:

 

Requires .NET Gadgeteer standard red power modules.

RoHS compliant /Lead-free compliant

 

Most EMX software features are GHI exclusive, see software documentation for details.

 

For more information about .NET Gadgeteer visit:

www.netmf.com/gadgeteer/

 

Photograph taken by Michael Kappel

www.MichaelKappel.com

 

Consisting of two prints of the tiny PCBs inside a Sega Megadrive. This PCB carried the power supply jack. They were connected to the mainboard by ribbon cables.

 

New for '91.

 

Four-colour silkscreen onto Somerset satin.

Free Photos – MSI 790GX-G65 - MainBoard PCB , 140W CPU Ready

 

More photos and details about possible copyright or licensing restrictions here:

public-photo.net/oldgallery/thumbnails-265.html

Full Size Up to 3072 x 2304 pixels

 

Information Regarding Copyright: public-photo.net/copyright/

PTI-227B I/O-ISA Card with Winbond W83757F.

This is "classic" ISA-PC super-I/O Card (2x seriell/1x parallel Port).

Remember the good-old days...

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Motherboard with an old Pentium 2 processor. Taken with a Nikon D90 and a Nikon 50mm f1.8

Intel PRO 100 Intelligent Server Adapter with Intel i960.

This is a rare Network-Card with a dedicated I/O-Processor - a part of the I2O System.

 

Intelligent Input/Output (I2O) is a defunct computer input/output (I/O) specification. I2O emerged from Intel in the mid 1990s with the publication of the I2O specification in 1996 by the Intelligent I/O Special Interest Group. I2O was originally designed to make use of the Intel i960 microprocessor as the I/O offload engine, bringing channel I/O to the PC.

For more info about I2O look at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I2O

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Rapid Prototyping for Production and Performance: Gadgeteer workshop at the Junction 2 in Cambridge 4/8/11

 

To test out the amazing work Tom Bartindale acheived during his current internship with Stuart Taylor building Gadgeteer modules to link the Gadgeteer prototyping platform with DMX and MIDI Tom, Stuart, and Nic organised a one day hands-on workshop involving hardware engineers, programmers, musicians, DJs, and event production folk at The Junction. It was amazing. We were using the new GHI FEZ Spider Mainboard due to ship at the end of September, plus sonar range finders, the GHI USB Client DP Module for power, Tom's new DMX/MIDI modules, LEDs, cameras, joysticks, RGB sensors, a wee touch screen display, xbee, and, of course, buttons!

 

I think Tom's planning to write the event up as a tech report or blog post. In the meantime if you want to get a feel for what it is like to control huge expensive complex theatre lighting systems with tiny Gadgeteer modules try the Bible: 1 Samuel 17:40-50!

 

(PS Sorry the photos are so blurred - it was dark)

PTI-227B I/O-ISA Card with Winbond W83757F.

This is "classic" ISA-PC super-I/O Card (2x seriell/1x parallel Port).

Remember the good-old days...

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Turtle Beach MultiSound Tahiti Soundcard

ISA Interface, one of the first generation of Sound-Cards.

 

Relase Date: 1991/1992

Turtle Beach introduced their revolutionary new sound hardware called MultiSound at COMDEX/Spring '91 which took place in Atlanta, GA on the 20th to 23rd of May 1991. The card hit the market in December of 1991 with a list price of 995 USD, though it was reduced to more affordable 600 USD by December of 1992 to compete better with Creative SoundBlaster 16 (350 USD for the ASP version) and alikes. In a matter of fact, MultiSound was a real engineering masterpiece aimed at sound professionals. It combined hardware advantages of the 56K system with much lower manufacturing costs and additional features, though it supported analogue inputs and outputs only. Unlike all other sound cards for the ISA bus, it didn't utilise DMA channels because the Hurricane architecture it was built upon required only a single IRQ, an I/O port and a 32Kb window in upper memory. So, this 4-layer board 34 centimetres long was populated by a whole lot of fine silicon hardware:

 

40MHz 24-bit Motorola DSP56001 / three 8x256Kbit 70ns SRAM chips;

10MHz 16-bit Motorola 68000 processor with two 8x256Kbit 70ns SRAM chips and one 512Kbit EPROM chip;

an E-mu Proteus 1/XR synthesiser with four 8Mbit Asahi Kasei ROM chips;

two Altera EP1810 (EP1810LC-20T - 48-macrocell programmable gate arrays;

two Crystal 4328 - 18-bit DACs with 64x oversampling;

one Crystal 5336 16-bit ADC with 64x oversampling;

three Philips NE5532 -dual 9V/µs 10MHz operational amplifiers;

two Dallas 1267 - dual 256-position resistor arrays;

one Philips NE558 quad timer;

some ISA bus buffering logic.

 

For more Information about this card look at: alasir.com/software/multisound/

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

"Chi phí thấp nhất cho nhu cầu tối đa"

CHỌN CHÚNG TÔI JIKO HOÀNG NGỌC = UY TÍN , HIỆU QUẢ , CHẤT LƯỢNG

 

Khái Quát Máy Jiko Intellingence Air Soure Heat Pump Water

Jiko là thiết bị công nghệ áp dụng định lý Carnot có công nghệ tiên tiến Thế Hệ Mới - Gia nhiệt bằng máy nén đồng thời cùng lúc hấp thu & trao đổi thêm năng lượng nhiệt có trong không khí để làm nền gia tăng nhiệt lên cao nhất

 

JIKO - Sản phẩm có hiệu suất chuyển đổi năng lượng cao nhất trong các mặt hàng có cùng tính năng , đạt từ 399% đến 635% - COP trung bình từ 4.0 cao nhất 6.35 vì thế khi máy vận hành chỉ tiêu tốn 13% so với tất cả các thiết bị làm nóng bằng điện khác đang có trên thị trường , giúp chúng ta tiết kiệm được tiền từ 87% đến 150%

 

máy nước nóng năng lượng không khí JIKO gồm 2 phần: Lốc máy và bồn chứa và làm nóng nước. Trong đó, lốc máy gồm bơm nhiệt và hệ thống ống thu nhiệt từ không khí và bộ phận kỹ thuật số để điều khiển máy hoạt động. Còn bồn chứa và làm nóng nước có hệ thống ống trao đổi nhiệt và bình chứa.

 

Máy nước nóng năng lượng không khí hoạt động theo nguyên lý: Lốc máy dùng điện để vận hành bơm nhiệt thu năng lượng (sức nóng từ không khí) từ môi trường sau đó chuyển nhiệt lên bồn chứa và làm nóng nước thông qua đường ống gas đi và về (giống như máy lạnh).

 

Nước nóng giá rẻ phục vụ mọi nhu cầu :

 

- Khách sạn - Resort - Bể bơi , Bể sục – Massage & Spa - Bệnh viện - Chung cư …

 

- Chi phí sử dụng máy Jiko cực thấp -> so với khi dùng các máy nước nóng thông thường khác Điện - Ga - Dầu - Bình NLMT phải hỗ trợ Điện

 

- Máy Jiko hoạt động trong mọi thời tiết : Mưa - Ban đêm - Mùa đông lạnh -5 độ C ( âm ).

 

Ưu điểm của máy.

 

An Toàn Tuyệt đối – Làm Nóng Nhanh – Lưu Lượng Cung Cấp Lớn

 

Siêu Tiết Kiệm Điện : Nước nóng giá rẻ, tiết kiệm chi phí từ 90 % -> 150%

 

Vận hành tự động Thông minh – Giảm chi phí nhân công trực

Sửa chữa, bảo dưỡng đơn giản

 

Lợi nhuận có được rất nhiều – trên 90% nhờ tiết kiệm đầu vào của: Điện; Ga; Dầu ; Nhân công;

 

Công tác hậu cần & Vật tư thay thế định kỳ của thiết bị Lò Hơi

- Mỗi thiết bị JIKO có 1 hoặc nhiều máy nén COPELAND chuyển động đều.

 

- Mainboard là board mạch chính dùng để điều khiển toàn bộ hệ thống máy – do Motorola Nghiên cứu & Sản xuất ( CIF ) Kiểm soát và điều khiển thông minh ( Intellingence ) hơn hẳn các thiết bị cùng loại khác.

 

- CPU – Flash được lập trình bởi các kỹ sư phần mềm thiết lập chu trình hoạt động được cập nhật , cải tiến liên tục qua nhiều thế hệ , máy chạy được 24/24 nhưng đặc biệt để bảo vệ máy nén các kỹ sư đã lập trình mặc định cho máy tự nghỉ 30 phút sau mỗi 8 giờ hoạt động liện tục .

 

- Dàn lạnh – hấp thu và trao đổi nhiệt không khí : Các Model 2012 thế hệ thứ 8 được JIKO tăng diện tích bề mặt tiếp xúc lên tối đa 2 lớp kép giúp cho máy có hiệu suất chuyển đổi nhiệt cao hơn từ 399 % -> 635%

 

( Các mặt hàng khác có 1 lớp chỉ được 299% - 380%)

- Quạt: hướng trục hoạt động theo lập trình Biến tần của Mainboard Center

 

- Van tiết lưu: Van áp kiểu 4 tầng tiên tiến được thiết kế đặc biệt cho Heatpump Jiko & Sluckz

 

- Bộ phận trao đổi nhiệt Heat Exchange : cấu thành từ các ống đồng đỏ , Titanium cuộn kiểu lò xo và được đặt bên trong 1 buồng chứa bằng kim loại tráng lớp bảo vệ chống ăn mòn hoặc Composite chịu áp lực -> 3,5 Mpa

 

- Sở hữu 02 loại vỏ máy :

 

* Thép sơn tĩnh điện cho môi trường bình thường

 

* Inox 304 cho môi trường nước biển, các nhà máy giặt

nhuộm có hóa chất, chế biến thủy sản , các bể bơi nước mặn

* Bơm nước: Bơm nước tuần hoàn không tích hợp kèm theo máy tăng tính năng độc lập cho việc kết nối mở.

 

* Màn hình LCD : Điều khiển khởi động On/Off bằng tay, các chế độ cài đặt tự động hoặc thủ công .

 

*** Đặc biệt : Quản lý toàn hệ thống đa điểm thông minh kỹ thuật số Auto – Stop mọi sự cố báo lổi để bảo vệ hệ thống toàn thời gian 24/24

 

Máy nước nóng jiko 2 trong 1: Vừa làm nòng nước để sữ dụng vừa sử dụng được điều hòa trong rất thuận tiện

Máy nước nóng dùng cho các hộ gia đình :

   

Xin vui lòng liên hệ để được hỗ trợ sản phẩm:

 

CÔNG TY TNHH CÔNG NGHỆ MỚI TIẾT KIỆM NĂNG LƯỢNG HOÀNG NGỌC

Địa chỉ: 31 Nguyễn Công Hoan , P.7, Quận. Phú Nhuận, TP.HCM

Hotline: 090.382.9619 - Fax:08.3551.3223

Office: 08.3.668.598.46. MST : 031 247 3717

hỗ trợ tốt nhất về giá: 0908.794.240 Mr.Cường  24/24H

E-mail: Jikovn@gmail.com

* VP MIỀN BẮC: Số 51 - Đốc Ngữ - Liễu Giai - Ba Đình - Hà Nội

Tel : 04 668 2057 Hotline: 0903 829 619 - Mr. Hải

Văn phòng chi nhánh:

: 51 Doc Ngu St, Ba Đinh District, Ha Noi

: 01 Phạm Ngũ Lão St, Ngô Quyền District, Hai Phong

: 12 Dã Tượng ST, Ward 5, Đà Lạt, Lâm Đồng

Website: www.hoangngoc.com.vn , www.jiko.vn , www.jikojapan.com

  

Here's what's inside:

 

EVGA X58 SLI Mainboard

i7 920 2.66Ghz Quad Core Processor

OCZ 6GB Gold Triple Channel PC3 12800

EVGA GeForce GTX 260 - Core 216 896MB DDR3

WD Raptor SATA 150GB

WD Caviar Blue SATA 320GB

LG DVD Drive

Seasonic 600watt Power Supply

Rosewill R5601-BK Mid-Tower Case (VERY impressed with this case)

Enermax 120mm UC-MA12 Fans (2x)

 

WATERCOOLING:

New Swiftech GTZ CPU Waterblock

Used radiator and pump from an old Coolermaster Aquagate Mini-120 setup.

 

The pump is a 3-in-1 Resevoir, waterblock, and pump deal. Instead of using it as the waterblock here (no i7 adapter available), I mounted it to a piece of 1/4" Teflon Sheet and Velcro'd it to the top of the hard drive cage, under the DVD drive.

 

Also had to modify the rear of the case just a bit to fit the radiator and the fan.

 

One positive about this system is that it's completely watertight. I can lay it on it's side or face without fear of leaks.

 

Oh yeah... Another positive is that it's dead quiet.

 

I wanted to replace the pump and the radiator (they're both 1/4" while most of the tubing and the waterblock are 3/8"), but the owner wants to stay closer to his $1k budget limit. We'll see tomorrow if it'll provide enough flow.

 

Total all-in cost: $1070 shipped (Newegg, TigerDirect, and FrozenCPU)

 

(It was $1010 before we realized the original waterblock wouldn't fit the i7 processor)

 

The only used parts were the psu, rad, pump, and the raptor.

 

I'm building this for one of my buddies at work. Upon seeing my shopping list, another guy in my shop ordered almost the exact same setup. he's going to build his himself. The benchmark shootout should be fun.

Intel PRO 100 Intelligent Server Adapter with Intel i960.

This is a rare Network-Card with a dedicated I/O-Processor - a part of the I2O System.

 

Intelligent Input/Output (I2O) is a defunct computer input/output (I/O) specification. I2O emerged from Intel in the mid 1990s with the publication of the I2O specification in 1996 by the Intelligent I/O Special Interest Group. I2O was originally designed to make use of the Intel i960 microprocessor as the I/O offload engine, bringing channel I/O to the PC.

For more info about I2O look at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I2O

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Altium is a *great* tool. Design-wise, we used two Arduino Mega 2560's, a Synapse wireless module, Locosys LS20031, Chronodot, and a bunch of (fun) design time!

 

Rapid Prototyping for Production and Performance: Gadgeteer workshop at the Junction 2 in Cambridge 4/8/11

 

To test out the amazing work Tom Bartindale acheived during his current internship with Stuart Taylor building Gadgeteer modules to link the Gadgeteer prototyping platform with DMX and MIDI Tom, Stuart, and Nic organised a one day hands-on workshop involving hardware engineers, programmers, musicians, DJs, and event production folk at The Junction. It was amazing. We were using the new GHI FEZ Spider Mainboard due to ship at the end of September, plus sonar range finders, the GHI USB Client DP Module for power, Tom's new DMX/MIDI modules, LEDs, cameras, joysticks, RGB sensors, a wee touch screen display, xbee, and, of course, buttons!

 

I think Tom's planning to write the event up as a tech report or blog post. In the meantime if you want to get a feel for what it is like to control huge expensive complex theatre lighting systems with tiny Gadgeteer modules try the Bible: 1 Samuel 17:40-50!

 

(PS Sorry the photos are so blurred - it was dark)

Turtle Beach MultiSound Tahiti Soundcard

ISA Interface, one of the first generation of Sound-Cards.

 

Relase Date: 1991/1992

Turtle Beach introduced their revolutionary new sound hardware called MultiSound at COMDEX/Spring '91 which took place in Atlanta, GA on the 20th to 23rd of May 1991. The card hit the market in December of 1991 with a list price of 995 USD, though it was reduced to more affordable 600 USD by December of 1992 to compete better with Creative SoundBlaster 16 (350 USD for the ASP version) and alikes. In a matter of fact, MultiSound was a real engineering masterpiece aimed at sound professionals. It combined hardware advantages of the 56K system with much lower manufacturing costs and additional features, though it supported analogue inputs and outputs only. Unlike all other sound cards for the ISA bus, it didn't utilise DMA channels because the Hurricane architecture it was built upon required only a single IRQ, an I/O port and a 32Kb window in upper memory. So, this 4-layer board 34 centimetres long was populated by a whole lot of fine silicon hardware:

 

40MHz 24-bit Motorola DSP56001 / three 8x256Kbit 70ns SRAM chips;

10MHz 16-bit Motorola 68000 processor with two 8x256Kbit 70ns SRAM chips and one 512Kbit EPROM chip;

an E-mu Proteus 1/XR synthesiser with four 8Mbit Asahi Kasei ROM chips;

two Altera EP1810 (EP1810LC-20T - 48-macrocell programmable gate arrays;

two Crystal 4328 - 18-bit DACs with 64x oversampling;

one Crystal 5336 16-bit ADC with 64x oversampling;

three Philips NE5532 -dual 9V/µs 10MHz operational amplifiers;

two Dallas 1267 - dual 256-position resistor arrays;

one Philips NE558 quad timer;

some ISA bus buffering logic.

 

For more Information about this card look at: alasir.com/software/multisound/

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

ADAPTEC AHA-1542B 16BIT ISA SCSI CONTROLLER

Very old complex ISA SCSI-Adaptercard

Relase Date: 1990

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

LK1,LK2,LK3 are optional links on the CPC mainboard, connected to PPI Port B, Bit1-3. The links select the distributor name (which is displayed by the BIOS in the boot message).

 

These LKs exist on all CPC mainboards. By default, LK1-LK3 are not installed (Amstrad). Other combinations are LK2 installed in german Schneider models, and LK1+LK2 in australian Awa models.

 

Please take a look at www.retrocomputers.eu for more info about my retro computer collection.

Hauppauge Win/TV Celebrity

ISA Interface, one of the first generation of TV-Cards.

 

Relase Date: 1994

 

The WinTV Celebrity was one of the first PC-TV cards with motion pictures. Because of the very slow ISA-bus there was a very complex technology used called "overlay" to put the TV-pictures into the PC-Monitor screen. The PC-VGA signal have to be digitalized and mixed on the card with TV-stream - very expensive...

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

Rapid Prototyping for Production and Performance: Gadgeteer workshop at the Junction 2 in Cambridge 4/8/11

 

To test out the amazing work Tom Bartindale acheived during his current internship with Stuart Taylor building Gadgeteer modules to link the Gadgeteer prototyping platform with DMX and MIDI Tom, Stuart, and Nic organised a one day hands-on workshop involving hardware engineers, programmers, musicians, DJs, and event production folk at The Junction. It was amazing. We were using the new GHI FEZ Spider Mainboard due to ship at the end of September, plus sonar range finders, the GHI USB Client DP Module for power, Tom's new DMX/MIDI modules, LEDs, cameras, joysticks, RGB sensors, a wee touch screen display, xbee, and, of course, buttons!

 

I think Tom's planning to write the event up as a tech report or blog post. In the meantime if you want to get a feel for what it is like to control huge expensive complex theatre lighting systems with tiny Gadgeteer modules try the Bible: 1 Samuel 17:40-50!

 

(PS Sorry the photos are so blurred - it was dark)

Intel PRO 100 Intelligent Server Adapter with Intel i960.

This is a rare Network-Card with a dedicated I/O-Processor - a part of the I2O System.

 

Intelligent Input/Output (I2O) is a defunct computer input/output (I/O) specification. I2O emerged from Intel in the mid 1990s with the publication of the I2O specification in 1996 by the Intelligent I/O Special Interest Group. I2O was originally designed to make use of the Intel i960 microprocessor as the I/O offload engine, bringing channel I/O to the PC.

For more info about I2O look at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I2O

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Intel PRO 100 Intelligent Server Adapter with Intel i960.

This is a rare Network-Card with a dedicated I/O-Processor - a part of the I2O System.

 

Intelligent Input/Output (I2O) is a defunct computer input/output (I/O) specification. I2O emerged from Intel in the mid 1990s with the publication of the I2O specification in 1996 by the Intelligent I/O Special Interest Group. I2O was originally designed to make use of the Intel i960 microprocessor as the I/O offload engine, bringing channel I/O to the PC.

For more info about I2O look at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I2O

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

Well, I know, it's been a while! :)

 

And I've been missing you all, my good flickr friends. Some of you have left me mails or comments (Thanks! all were read), and yes, I'll be taking my time to answer them as well, work in progress. Long story short, I've missed being here a lot. It's been a long and nasty winter, mostly dark and cloudy. Days were pretty short, and the weather wasn't really helping at all, either. So I've stopped for a breather, (life's been tumultuous), focused on lots of other things, waiting for the right time to return here.

 

And here we go, finally spring's here, we've got some some sunlight every now and then, and evenings don't fall at 05:00PM anymore. Dark winters are not really the best time for us, light-chasers, you know. I've got so many things to tell you, so many things to show, and even more ideas yet to be put into action.

 

But first things first, you may ask yourselves:

What the hell is this crappy shot doing here?! :D

Well, just like all of'em, it's got a story. My good old computer's motherboard has just died. Well, it served well for a bit more than 4 (yes, four!) years, so what do you expect. Like a good techie, I've digged up lots of resources, to find the origins of the fault. Well, except for aging components, dust, and heat, which were pretty obvious.

 

And here's what I've come up with, pretty interesting:

I've found that my motherboard suffered of Capacitor Plague!

 

"In some cases, the root cause of the failing capacitors is industrial espionage gone wrong. Several Taiwanese electrolyte manufacturers began using a stolen formula that was incomplete, and lacked ingredients needed to produce a stable capacitor. (An anti-corrosion ingredient was not documented, reported in comp.risks.)

 

When a faulty capacitor is charged, the water-based electrolyte becomes unstable, and breaks down producing hydrogen gas. Since these types of capacitors are sealed in an aluminum casing, the pressure builds up within the capacitor until either the flat metal tops of the capacitor begins to bend, or the rubber sealing plug is pushed down. Eventually the pressure exceeds the strength of the metal casing and venting occurs, either by blowing out the rubber bottom of the capacitor, or bursting the scored metal vent on the top of the capacitor." -- source: Wikipedia

 

Note the row of six capacitors to the right (just near my processor) - five of wich got a bulging top, that might just pop sooner or later. I've taken these macros while I was trying to read what was written on them, and determine the manufacturer's name.

The motherboard is an Epox 8RDA3i, and the faulty capacitors turned out to be some TEAPO (EL Teapo! :D) brand, shame, shame, shame.

 

Then I've discovered www.badcaps.net/ a site that's already making good business out of recapping (changing all faulty cheap capacitors on) all kind of motherboards. The guys got a nice forum running, where I have found my motherboard series (among MANY-MANY others!!!), and checked their optinion about the (el) TEAPO capacitors.

 

The three caps to the right are of another brand (HERMEI), they still have nice flat tops and they seem intact. I've sent the old PC to a friend's local shop for a quick re-capping (without the hard drives, which I have kept here). I hope it will get fixed in about a week's time.

 

Meanwhile, my batteries have recharged! I'm hoping to catch some fresh shots of whatever comes into lens' range. I'd love a little sunlight, if possible, and whatever comes with it, will be captured. See you all soon!

Rapid Prototyping for Production and Performance: Gadgeteer workshop at the Junction 2 in Cambridge 4/8/11

 

To test out the amazing work Tom Bartindale acheived during his current internship with Stuart Taylor building Gadgeteer modules to link the Gadgeteer prototyping platform with DMX and MIDI Tom, Stuart, and Nic organised a one day hands-on workshop involving hardware engineers, programmers, musicians, DJs, and event production folk at The Junction. It was amazing. We were using the new GHI FEZ Spider Mainboard due to ship at the end of September, plus sonar range finders, the GHI USB Client DP Module for power, Tom's new DMX/MIDI modules, LEDs, cameras, joysticks, RGB sensors, a wee touch screen display, xbee, and, of course, buttons!

 

I think Tom's planning to write the event up as a tech report or blog post. In the meantime if you want to get a feel for what it is like to control huge expensive complex theatre lighting systems with tiny Gadgeteer modules try the Bible: 1 Samuel 17:40-50!

 

(PS Sorry the photos are so blurred - it was dark)

Intel PRO 100 Intelligent Server Adapter with Intel i960.

This is a rare Network-Card with a dedicated I/O-Processor - a part of the I2O System.

 

Intelligent Input/Output (I2O) is a defunct computer input/output (I/O) specification. I2O emerged from Intel in the mid 1990s with the publication of the I2O specification in 1996 by the Intelligent I/O Special Interest Group. I2O was originally designed to make use of the Intel i960 microprocessor as the I/O offload engine, bringing channel I/O to the PC.

For more info about I2O look at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I2O

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

Diamond Viper V550 with Nvidia Riva TNT.

PCI Interface, 16MB SDRAM, first generation of Nvidia chips.

 

Relase Date: 1998

 

The RIVA TNT, codenamed NV4, is a 2D, video, and 3D graphics accelerator chip for PCs that was manufactured by Nvidia. The TNT was designed as a follow up to the RIVA 128 and a response to 3Dfx's introduction of the Voodoo2. It added a second pixel pipeline, practically doubling rendering speed, and used considerably faster memory. Unlike the Voodoo2 (but like the slower Matrox G200) it also added support for a 32-bit (truecolor) pixel format, 24-bit Z-buffer in 3D mode, an 8-bit stencil buffer and support for 1024×1024 pixels textures. Improved texture filtering techniques, partially assisted by newly added trilinear filtering, dramatically improved image quality compared to the TNT's predecessor. It also added support for up to 16 MiB of SDR SDRAM. TNT was a single chip solution.

 

For more pictures of vintage PC-Cards and Mainboards look at Vintage Computer PC Cards and Mainboards

 

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