NEC-SIRCS-JAPAN-RC5-SAMSUNG compatible, multiprotocol infrared remote control.
Replaces up to 6 existing remote controls into one.
With manual learning function, LED display and/or LCD. 2V6-3V2, low power (sleep function)
More protocols will be added later if needed (DENON, DAEWOO, MOTOROLA, RECS80.)
In the last decade the processing of polygonal meshes has
emerged as an active and very productive research area. This
can basically be attributed to two developments:
Modern geometry acquisition devices, like laser scanners
and MRT, easily produce raw polygonal meshes of
ever growing complexity
Downstream applications like analysis tools (medical
imaging), computer aided manufacturing, or numerical
simulations all require high quality polygonal meshes
as input.
The need to bridge the gap between raw triangle soup data
and high-quality polygon meshes has driven the research on
ecient data structures and algorithms that directly operate
on polygonal meshes rather than on a (most often not
feasible) intermediate CAD representation.
This manual describes SAMSUNG s S3C2410A 16/32-bit RISC microprocessor. This product is designed to provide
hand-held devices and general applications with cost-effective, low-power, and high-performance micro-controller
solution in small die size. To reduce total system cost, the S3C2410A includes the following components separate
16KB Instruction and 16KB Data Cache, MMU to handle virtual memory management, LCD Controller (STN & TFT),
NAND Flash Boot Loader, System Manager (chip select logic and SDRAM Controller), 3-ch UART, 4-ch DMA, 4-ch
Timers with PWM, I/O Ports, RTC, 8-ch 10-bit ADC and Touch Screen Interface, IIC-BUS Interface, IIS-BUS
Interface, USB Host, USB Device, SD Host & Multi-Media Card Interface, 2-ch SPI and PLL for clock generation.
Abstract—In this paper, we propose transform-domain algorithms to
effectively classify the characteristics of blocks and estimate the strength
of the blocky effect. The transform-domain algorithms require much
lower computational complexity and much less memory than the spatial
ones. Along with the estimated blocky strength,
The Hilbert Transform is an important component in communication systems, e.g. for single sideband modulation/demodulation, amplitude and phase detection, etc. It can be formulated as filtering operation which makes it possible to approximate the Hilbert Transform with a digital filter. Due to the non-causal and infinite impulse response of that filter, it is not that easy to get a good approximation with low hardware resource usage. Therefore, different filters with different complexities have been implemented.
The detailed discussion can be found in "Digital Hilbert Transformers or FPGA-based Phase-Locked Loops" (http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=4629940).
The design is fully pipelined for maximum throughput.
The LN2410SBC is a high performance single board computer based on ARM920T (MMU included). Its ultra low power consumption, various built-in IO ports and support for Linux/WinCE/RTOS make it suitable for many industry applications.
High volume USB 2.0 devices will be designed using ASIC technology with embedded USB 2.0 support.
For full-speed USB devices the operating frequency was low enough to allow data recovery to be handled
in a vendors VHDL code, with the ASIC vendor providing only a simple level translator to meet the USB
signaling requirements. Today s gate arrays operate comfortably between 30 and 60 MHz. With USB 2.0
signaling running at hundreds of MHz, the existing design methodology must change.
High volume USB 2.0 devices will be designed using ASIC technology with embedded USB 2.0 support.
For full-speed USB devices the operating frequency was low enough to allow data recovery to be handled
in a vendors VHDL code, with the ASIC vendor providing only a simple level translator to meet the USB
signaling requirements. Today s gate arrays operate comfortably between 30 and 60 MHz. With USB 2.0
signaling running at hundreds of MHz, the existing design methodology must change.