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A Microchip 8 pin PIC 12F675 is used as the main controller. 1 analog input and 4 digital outputs are used. The analog input is used to monitor a phototransistor. The outputs are used to drive the laser module with a 5 khz square wave, the homebuild ArnoShutter, the DC/DC converter and buzzer, and the Flash respectively. The powersupply consist of 4 X AA NiMh batteries with low self discharge characteristics so the unit is always ready, even after weeks of inoperative.
Microchip’s Starter Kit for PIC24F Intelligent.Integrated.Analog (part # DM240015), which is being offered for a special introductory price of $89.99 for a limited time. This kit is focused on the family’s integrated analog to preserve signal integrity. It provides 95% of what designers need to develop a handheld analog prototype—all they need to do is add sensors. For more info, visit: www.microchip.com/get/SMPG
Microchip's new PIC24FJ128GC010 family of microcontrollers. This family is an analog system on a chip that integrates a full analog signal chain, including Microchip’s first ever on-chip precision 16-bit ADC and 10 Msps 12-bit ADC, plus a DAC and dual operational amplifiers (op amps), along with eXtreme Low Power (XLP) technology for extended battery life in portable medical and industrial applications. For more info, visit: www.microchip.com/get/6T4J
Microchip's LAN9252 stand-alone EtherCAT® slave controller has two 10/100 PHYs. This highly integrated device’s dual 10/100 Ethernet transceivers support both fiber and copper, along with cable diagnostics capabilities. The LAN9252 supports traditional Host Bus and SPI/SQI™ communication, along with standalone digital I/O interfaces, providing system designers the flexibility to select from a wide range of microcontrollers when implementing the real-time EtherCAT communications standard. Additionally, the LAN9252 reduces system complexity and cost for developers using EtherCAT in factory-automation, process-control, motor/motion-control and Internet of Things (IoT) industrial-Ethernet applications. To learn more about Microchip’s EtherCAT controllers, visit: www.microchip.com/EtherCAT-041715a.
Microchip's LAN9252 stand-alone EtherCAT® slave controller has two 10/100 PHYs. This highly integrated device’s dual 10/100 Ethernet transceivers support both fiber and copper, along with cable diagnostics capabilities. The LAN9252 supports traditional Host Bus and SPI/SQI™ communication, along with standalone digital I/O interfaces, providing system designers the flexibility to select from a wide range of microcontrollers when implementing the real-time EtherCAT communications standard. Additionally, the LAN9252 reduces system complexity and cost for developers using EtherCAT in factory-automation, process-control, motor/motion-control and Internet of Things (IoT) industrial-Ethernet applications. To learn more about Microchip’s EtherCAT controllers, visit: www.microchip.com/EtherCAT-041715a.
Microchip today announced a new series of its low-cost, high pin count 32-bit PIC32 microcontrollers (MCUs). By blending the key features of Microchip’s existing PICM32MX1/2 and PIC32MX5 MCU families, this latest PIC32MX1/2/5 MCU series delivers designers the benefits of a rich peripheral set for a wide range of cost-sensitive applications that require complex code and higher feature integration at a lower cost. With up to 83 DMIPS performance and large, scalable memory options from 512/64 KB Flash/RAM to 64/8 KB Flash/RAM, these new PIC32MX1/2/5 MCUs are ideal for executing the Bluetooth® audio software required for low-cost Bluetooth audio applications, such as speakers, consumer music-player docks, noise-cancelling headsets and clock radios. Flexible, easy-to-use CAN2.0B controllers are also integrated into these MCUs, with DeviceNet™ addressing support and programmable bit rates up to 1 Mbps, along with system RAM for storing up to 1024 messages in 32 buffers. This feature allows designers to easily employ CAN communication schemes for industrial and automotive applications. For more info, visit www.microchip.com/PIC32MX-Page-110314a
Welcome to www.kkulikov.com - Photos and footage for mass media, advertizing agencies and design studios, and also private designers and bloggers.
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This is a silicon wafer with RAM microchips lithographically printed on them. They're mass produced in this wafer form, and then later cut down, and packaged into dies. These particular wafers contain mostly RAM. They were manufactured for Ford Aerospace back in the mid 1980s.
In the closeup you can zoom all the way in, and resolve the details of individual transistors. Just a year or two later, that would no longer have been possible without much more powerful microscopes. The transistors etched onto these wafers are positively huge by modern standards...hundreds, or thousands of times larger.
On May 16, 2013, Microchip announced the shipment of its 12 billionth PIC® microcontroller (MCU) to the Nidec Corporation—a preeminent global supplier of precision motors, based in Japan. Microchip delivered this 12 billionth MCU approximately 10 months after delivering its 11 billionth. In this photo, Mr. Hitoshi Tatsuno, Vice President of Operation Management Dept. & Purchasing Dept., Nidec Corporation, receives the 12 billionth PIC Microcontroller trophy from Joe Krawczyk, Vice President, Sales, Asia Pacific, Microchip Technology Inc. For more info, visit www.microchip.com/PIC.
Microchip Thailand as seen from the rice paddy to the west of the factory (Monday, October 31, 2011).
Microchip announced its third-generation USB3 Controller Hubs (UCH3s)—the four-member USB553XB-5000 family, which is SuperSpeed Logo Certified by the USB Implementers Forum and is the world’s first to integrate OTP Flash configuration memory. This UCH3 family is also the industry’s most flexible, as it includes a seven-port hybrid version with a certified four-port USB3 hub and three additional USB2 lanes. The remaining three family members feature two-, three- and four-port USB3 hubs, respectively, providing a broad migration path for the designers of PCs, peripherals, computing platforms, storage solutions, networking and consumer devices, set-top boxes, docking stations and monitors. For more info, visit: www.smsc.com/Products/USB/USB_Hubs/Standalone_USB_Hubs/US....
The Wi-Fi® Comm Demo Board combines Microchip’s best-in-class 32-bit PIC32 microcontroller family with its low-power MRF24WB0MA agency-certified, IEEE 802.11, embedded Wi-Fi radio transceiver module. Additionally, Microchip provides a free and full-featured TCP/IP stack, which is available today for download at www.microchip.com/TCPIP. This compact and cost-effective demo board is easy to integrate with existing embedded designs, to evaluate Wi-Fi connectivity and 32-bit performance with minimal effort. For more info, visit: www.microchip.com/stellent/idcplg?IdcService=SS_GET_PAGE&...
Microchip announced an expansion of its programmable USB port power controllers with the three-member UCS100X family. The UCS100X family is supported by Microchip’s new UCS1001-3/4 Evaluation Board (Part # ADM00540, $24.99) and UCS1002-2 Evaluation Board (Part # ADM00497, $90.00), both of which are available today from any Microchip sales representative or authorized worldwide distributor. These new power controllers offer advanced USB-based charging capabilities for designing host devices, such as laptops, tablets, monitors, docking stations and printers; as well as dedicated AC-DC power-supply and charging products, such as wall adapters. For more info, visit: www.microchip.com/get/TKTE
Hi everyone! My name is Lilo and I am a mama's girl. I love the ladies and all the doggies. I’m about 4 years young, but I’m a mellow, laid back lady at heart. I love nothing more than snuggles, Netflix, chillin', more snuggles and long walks to the fridge for hot dogs. That’s about all I do besides ... oh yeah .... more snuggles. I do get spunky on occasion and I love to play with other dogs, gnawing on my foster brother's ears and neck. I like my little 13-lb canine foster brother the best, but sometimes I forget how much bigger I am. Luckily, I’m super great at recall and when my name is called I know I am going to get all the lovins and the pets so I come-a-runnin! I go potty outside like the best girl that I am! And when I gets all the love, or when I play with my foster brothers, I may in fact be mistaken for a piggy because I make the silliest noises. I will have you laughing in no time. Maybe that’s why they call us truffle pigs because the hoomans can’t tell if I’m oinking or snorting or what ... I’m not even sure myself! But I must be a dog because my foster hooman lets me sleep in the bed. I don't move or wiggle or anything. I cuddle up nice, in a circle and I land in a little ball of sleepiness. Like most truffle pigs, I like to burrow under the blankets. Sometimes just my head, but I like to be toasty warm. I told you before I was the goodest girl! All I want is a furever hooman to give me love and kisses all day every day! Please apply today! Adoption fee: $80. Adopt a pair: $120. Fee includes testing, deworming, vaccinations, spay/neuter, 30 days of free pet insurance, one session with a certified behavior trainer and microchip. Apply at form.jotform.com/81935638982170
Sarah, 33, was born and brought up in Bangalore. She is an Electronics Engineer and used to work as a microchip design Engineer. Currently she is working for an NGO, named Project Smile.
About her passion for social causes she says “ Charity, social justice, helping others, has been an integral part of my life since Childhood. I cannot stand injustice. My mother works in Education and my father has been an avid wildlife conservationist and a journalist. Time and again I’ve seen my parents stand up for what is right. They have been a major influence. And there are so many people I’ve met along the way who have influenced and inspired me.”
She took me on a tour around the place where they set up for the day. It was a huge warehouse where a lot of people had come to help. All volunteers had gathered and were packing bags to be distributed the other day, to all around Bangalore. The Project Smile "Iftar Kit" contained, Chicken, onion, tomatoes, potatoes, ginger, garlic, and two fresh fruits available in the market.
She says “Ramadan, for me is like a training ground. Anything you do in life needs training. This month no matter which country you are in, where you’re at, the rules are the same. After this month you know you can be the best possible version of yourself. I want to be the same person all my life."
"Training is done this month, you go out into the world, and be that person for the rest of your life. That’s the goal. Ramadan is also one of the most busiest month of all for me. It is the most active time of the year. You cannot just sit around doing nothing, you do the best for yourself and for the society. For me it is all the more enjoyable."
"I connect to it even more after I’ve had my children, I have two sons, and I understand in order to make them responsible citizens of the world, Ramadan’s teachings are important. If you want to change yourself for the better, this is the month to do that. Change your bad habits, one at a time, inculcate good ones, one at a time and become better day by day.”
Photo and text by Poornima Marh.
Americans have the choice of Obama's Blue Pill of Blissful Ignorance or the Red Pill of Painful Reality.
With ObamaCare, your obedience to Big Brother Obama is mandatory...
Health Link is an AD for VeriChip's implantable Patient Identification Microchip. Sec 1173a of H.R. 3200 of Obamacare clearly states that the determination of an individual’s financial responsibility and whether the individual is eligible for a specific service "may include a machine-readable health plan beneficiary identification card;"
The key phrase, may include leaves the door wide open to other possibilities like VeriChip's Health Link.
For people with chronic conditions and poor compliance to medication, Proteus Biomedical Inc. has created a digestible microchip embedded in prescription pills which is activated by stomach fluids. The internal Pill Spy sends a signal to a microelectronic receiver either in a small skin patch or implanted under the skin on your shoulder. The microelectronic receiver transmits a wireless signal to Big Brother doctors monitoring your healthcare.
Ironically, many companies are using wireless technology to create a health-care system to keep people healthier for less which Big Brother Obama was allegedly seeking to achieve through legislation yet, businesses like Denny's has added a 5% surcharge and reduced employees' hours to make Obamacare affordable.
Obamacare taxes equals Obamacare layoffs: 800,000 jobs at risk as we head Forward to the Fiscal Cliff of Taxmageddon.
Microchip Technology Inc. President and CEO, Steve Sanghi, at the NASDAQ stock exchange. For more information, visit www.microchip.com
Found this old graphics card, with more dust on than could be seen by the naked eye, but! All is revealed in this macro shot of one of its many microchips for the MM shot on 22nd May 2017.
Microchip announced the new 24-member PIC32MZ Embedded Connectivity (EC) family of 32-bit MCUs. It provides class-leading performance of 330 DMIPS and 3.28 CoreMarks™/MHz, along with dual-panel, live-update Flash (up to 2 MB), large RAM (512 KB) and the connectivity peripherals—including a 10/100 Ethernet MAC, Hi-Speed USB MAC/PHY (a first for PIC® MCUs) and dual CAN ports—needed to support today’s demanding applications. The PIC32MZ also has class-leading code density that is 30% better than competitors, along with a 28 Msps ADC that offers one of the best throughput rates for 32-bit MCUs. Rounding out this family’s high level of integration is a full-featured hardware crypto engine with a random number generator for high-throughput data encryption/decryption and authentication (e.g., AES, 3DES, SHA, MD5 and HMAC), as well as the first SQI interface on a Microchip MCU and the PIC32’s highest number of serial channels. For more info visit www.microchip.com/get/ESJG
Microchip Technology's MCP795BXX/WXX RTCC devices have a 10 MHz SPI interface, non-volatile memory and an effective combination of features at a price lower than most competitors’ devices, including those with fewer features.
Microchip’s April 2010 acquisition of Silicon Storage Technology, Inc. (SST) included a legacy 80C51 MCU business, which Microchip has continued to support. For more information, visit Microchip’s Web site at www.microchip.com/8051legacy.
Microchip's next-generation family of energy-measurement Analog Front Ends (AFEs) feature industry-leading accuracy. The MCP3913 and MCP3914 integrate six and eight 24-bit, sigma-delta Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs), respectively, with 94.5 dB SINAD, -106.5 dB THD and 112 dB SFDR for high-accuracy signal acquisition and higher-performing end products. The MCP3914’s two extra ADCs enable the monitoring of more sensors with one chip, lowering cost and size. Additionally, the programmable data rate of up to 125 ksps with low-power modes allows designers to scale down for better power consumption or to use higher data rates for advanced signal analysis, such as calculating harmonic content. These AFEs also feature a CRC-16 checksum and register-map lock, for increased robustness. For more info, visit: www.microchip.com/get/TEND
Microchip announced a new series within its high-performance PIC32MZ family of 32-bit microcontrollers (MCUs) that features an integrated hardware floating point unit (FPU) for high performance and lower latency in intensive single and double-precision math applications. This new 48-member PIC32MZ EF series also offers a 12-bit, 18 MSPS analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for a wide array of high-speed, wide-bandwidth applications. Additionally, the PIC32MZ EF supports an extensive DSP instruction set. This combination of DSP instructions, a double-precision FPU and a high-speed ADC improves code density, decreases latency and accelerates performance in process-intensive applications. For an overview of the PIC32MZ family, please visit: www.microchip.com/PIC32MZ-091415a
This is an old broken hard drive I had stored in a drawer (because you never know when you will need a broken hard drive!).
"A microchip--an electronic device the size of a rice grain--implanted invisibly in your horse's neck can provide him permanent identification. Etched with a unique number and encapsulated in glass, the chip is inserted with a syringe. It can be activated by a hand-held radio-frequency scanner, which then reads the number. And it functions for 25 years or longer."
www.equisearch.com/horses_care/health/rescue/microchip_08...