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MicroChip Masters 2018.
Corporate Photography by Mark Skalny .
1-888-658-3686 .
www.markskalnyphotography.com.
.
#MSP1207
With rail-to-rail input and output, low operating voltage down to 1.8V, low quiescent current and package options with push-pull and open-drain outputs, Microchip's MCP656X Comparators provide a high level of performance for a wide variety of applications.
Microchip’s certified ZigBee PRO protocol stack provides yet another option for IEEE 802.15.4-based wireless networks using Microchip’s PIC MCUs. The combination of Microchip’s ZigBee PRO stack, the MRF24J40 transceiver radio or transceiver modules, and any of its 16-bit PIC24 MCUs or dsPIC33 DSCs forms Microchip’s ZigBee PRO Compliant Platform, as certified by the ZigBee Alliance.
Then a microchip is placed inside their abdomen with a syringe. Our dog has a microchip too, but I bet only the newts in this area have one in them.
MicroChip Masters 2018.
Corporate Photography by Mark Skalny .
1-888-658-3686 .
www.markskalnyphotography.com.
.
#MSP1207
Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy
Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy.
Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy.
From a little booklet that has emerged as profJohn gets round to sorting stuff he brought home when he retired, yonks ago ...
Order of Lenin Institute of Cybernetics of Academy of Sciences of Ukrainian SSR, which he visited in 1990. The booklet appears to have been published in 1979.
RFID tags are miniscule microchips, which already have shrunk to half the size of a grain of sand. They listen for a radio query and respond by transmitting their unique ID code. Most RFID tags have no batteries: They use the power from the initial radio signal to transmit their response. You should become familiar with RFID technology because you'll be hearing much more about it soon. Retailers adore the concept. Wal-Mart and the U.K.-based grocery chain Tesco are starting to install "smart shelves" with networked RFID readers. In what will become the largest test of the technology, consumer goods giant Gillette recently said it would purchase 500 million RFID tags from Alien Technology of Morgan Hill, Calif. It becomes unnervingly easy to imagine a scenario where everything you buy that's more expensive than a Snickers will sport RFID tags, which typically include a 64-bit unique identifier yielding about 18 thousand trillion possible values. KSW-Microtec, a German company, has invented washable RFID tags designed to be sewn into clothing. And according to EE Times, the European central bank is considering embedding RFID tags into banknotes by 2005.
A cropped image of a Samsung microchip shot with my Nikon MPlan 20X 0.4 DIC objective. FOV is approx 0.5mm. A focus stack of 5 images. Makes for an interesting piece of abstract art.
Playing around with lighting this morning. This was shot with flash. I emptied a used Keurig coffee pod, cut some slits in its base and mounted it on the objective as a diffuser and then fired the flash through it. Seems to do a reasonable job in diffusing the light.
Four years ago I took this broken computer piece from my old high school so that I could photograph my dolls in front of it. Can't believe I'm only getting around to it now!
It was taking up room in my closet so I took these as last minute shots before throwing it out once and for all.
Uno looks so happy lately. I think it's my new room, I think he likes it :)))