The OMNI Naming Service (omniNames) is an omniORB implementation of the
OMG’s COS Naming Service SpECification. It offers a way for a client to turn
a human-readable name into an object reference, on which the client can subsequently
invoke operations in the normal way. See the OMG SpECification for full
details of the functionality provided by the Naming Service.
This program displays all SMBIOS/DMI information within the BIOS. The
information is organized as a series of Structures each of which is a
certain Type. For more details, see a copy of the SMBIOS
SpECification "System Management BIOS Reference SpECification".
This document provides guidelines for integrating a discrete high speed USB host controller onto a fourlayer
desktop motherboard. The material covered can be broken into three main categories: Board design
guidelines, EMI/ESD guidelines and front panel USB guidelines. Section 1.1 Background provides an
explanation of the routing experiments and testing performed to validate the feasibility of 480 Megabits per
second on an actual motherboard. Section 7 contains a design checklist that lists each design
recommendation described in this document. High speed USB operation is described in the USB 2.0
SpECification (http://www.usb.org/developers/docs.html).
This document provides guidelines for integrating a discrete high speed USB host controller onto a fourlayer
desktop motherboard. The material covered can be broken into three main categories: Board design
guidelines, EMI/ESD guidelines and front panel USB guidelines. Section 1.1 Background provides an
explanation of the routing experiments and testing performed to validate the feasibility of 480 Megabits per
second on an actual motherboard. Section 7 contains a design checklist that lists each design
recommendation described in this document. High speed USB operation is described in the USB 2.0
SpECification (http://www.usb.org/developers/docs.html).
Example to support XML files using MSXML.
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XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a commonly used basis for representing a
huge range of structured data file formats. The SpECification is maintained by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C?. This plugin is intended as an example of
how XML data can be read with a DataPlugin. You can adjust it to meet the needs
of your own XML file format.
After installing the URI file (double click on it), you can find the VBScript
file located at
"C:\Program Files\National Instruments\Shared\USI\plugins\DataPlugins\XML Example"
You can make changes to this file to read your specific XML file.
XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a commonly used basis for representing a
huge range of structured data file formats. The SpECification is maintained by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C?. This plugin is intended as an example of
how XML data can be read with a DataPlugin. You can adjust it to meet the needs
of your own XML file format.
XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a commonly used basis for representing a
huge range of structured data file formats. The SpECification is maintained by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C?. This plugin is intended as an example of
how XML data can be read with a DataPlugin. You can adjust it to meet the needs
of your own XML file format.
XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a commonly used basis for representing a
huge range of structured data file formats. The SpECification is maintained by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C?. This plugin is intended as an example of
how XML data can be read with a DataPlugin. You can adjust it to meet the needs
of your own XML file format.