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Within weeks of the agreement expiring in 1989, he announced plans for the BD-10J [2] under the aegis of Bede Jet Corporation, at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport. The BD-5's failure was due largely to the unavailability of a suitable engine; during the BD-5's history one engine company after another either exited the engine business or went ...
An Intel Pentium Mobile, clocked at 300 MHz (1998). A mobile processor is a microprocessor designed for mobile devices such as laptops and cell phones.. A CPU chip is designed for portable computers to run fanless, under 10 to 15W, which is cool enough without a fan. [1]
Mobile processor Processors – Socket S1 Turion 64 X2 dual-core 64-bit Hawk family processor 65 nm (codenamed Tyler), or; Mobile Sempron single-core 64-bit processor 65 nm (codenamed Sherman) Mobile chipset HDMI, HyperTransport 1.0 and PCI Express 1.0; DDR2-800 SO-DIMM; Mobile support Wireless IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/draft-N support, mini-PCIe Wi-Fi ...
Bede Aircraft Corporation was founded by aeronautical engineer Jim Bede in Cleveland in 1961 to produce the BD-1 kit aircraft, which eventually became the American Aviation Corporation's AA-1. The company also created and produced a number of advanced kit planes including the famous Bede BD-5 ( pusher propeller driven) and BD-5J (turbojet driven).
The company also achieved ISO9001 quality certification in avionics. [5] The first flight of the Chengdu J-10 fighter in 1998 was an achievement that proved the company's ability to produce China's third generation of fighter technology. In 2002 the first prototypes of the FC-1 / Super-7 fighter, jointly developed with Pakistan, were completed.
The aircraft featured retractable undercarriage, split flaps, spoilers to reduce speed for landing, and a V-tail for decreased drag in cruise. Two versions were planned — the BD-5A with "short" wings for high speeds, and the BD-5B with 4 ft (1.2 m) longer wings for range and powered glider use. Performance of the BD-5A was claimed to be 210 ...
MStar made hardware for multimedia and wireless communications, in the form of display ICs and mixed-mode (i.e. combining analog and digital functions) ASIC/IPs, in addition to chip sets for GSM mobile handsets. MStar employed approx. 1300 in more than 10 branches worldwide. The company's revenue was around US$1067 million in 2010. [2]
The IBM AP-101B CPU and I/O processor (right) and AP-101S (left) The IBM System/4 Pi is a family of avionics computers used, in various versions, on the F-15 Eagle fighter, E-3 Sentry AWACS, Harpoon Missile, NASA's Skylab, MOL, and the Space Shuttle, as well as other aircraft. Development began in 1965, deliveries in 1967. [1]