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Therminol is a synthetic heat transfer fluid [1] produced by Eastman Chemical Company. Therminol fluids are used in a variety of applications, including: [2] Hydrocarbon processing (oil and gas, refining, asphalt, gas-to-liquid, etc.) Alternative energy and technologies (concentrated solar power, biofuel, organic Rankine cycle, desalination, etc.)
VP-Info is a database language and compiler for the personal computer. [1] VP-Info was a competitor to the Clipper and dBase applications in the late 1980s and 1990s. [2] VP-Info was originally intended to run on MS-DOS, DR-DOS and the PC-MOS/386 operating system, but now is run on the vDOS, [3] or DOSbox-X, [4] emulators.
VIA chipsets support CPUs from Intel, AMD (e.g. the Athlon 64) and VIA themselves (e.g. the VIA C3 or C7).They support CPUs as old as the i386 in the early 1990s. In the early 2000s, their chipsets began to offer on-chip graphics support from VIA's joint venture with S3 Graphics beginning in 2001; this support continued into the early 2010s, with the release of the VX11H in August 2012.
1 8000 any 20 ITU-T G.711 PCM μ-Law audio 64 kbit/s RFC 3551 1 reserved (previously FS-1016 CELP) audio 1 8000 reserved, previously FS-1016 CELP audio 4.8 kbit/s RFC 3551, previously RFC 1890 2 reserved (previously G721 or G726-32) audio 1 8000 reserved, previously ITU-T G.721 ADPCM audio 32 kbit/s or ITU-T G.726 audio 32 kbit/s
VP3 has 64 bits memory bus; 32 bits 33 MHz PCI; 32 bits 66 MHz AGP 2X with sideband addressing, 133 MHz signalling and up to 533 MB/s transfer capability interfaces. It uses an integrated 10-bits TAG comparator and supports up to 2 MB pipelined burst synchronous SRAM ( cache memory ) and up to 1 GB ECC cachable RAM memory.
Internally, addresses are all 32 bits: an upper 16-bit word with a leading 0 in bit 15, the 7-bit segment number, and then 8 zeros. This requires more memory to store, as each 23-bit address uses up 32 bits of register space, but allows the addresses to be cleanly stored in the 16-bit registers and can be more easily pushed and popped from the ...
The NEC μCOM series is a series of microprocessors and microcontrollers manufactured by NEC in the 1970s and 1980s. The initial entries in the series were custom-designed 4 and 16-bit designs, but later models in the series were mostly based on the Intel 8080 and Zilog Z80 8-bit designs, and later, the Intel 8086 16-bit design.
Western Digital datasheet for the FD1771 floppy disk controller. The FD1771, sometimes WD1771, is a floppy disk controller chip, the first in a line of floppy disk controllers produced by Western Digital. It uses single density FM encoding introduced in the IBM 3740.