Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Figure 1: The Ford Mk 1 Ballistic Computer. The name "rangekeeper" began to become inadequate to describe the increasingly complicated functions of rangekeeper. The Mk 1 Ballistic Computer was the first rangekeeper that was referred to as a computer. Note the three pistol grips in the foreground, which are the firing keys of the main guns.
A hardware can be controlled from a software with the help of a middle device called hardware controller, this hardware controller can be used to perform various automated task from hardware, generally hardware controller consist of GPIO(general purpose input and output) pins, these pin's behaviour controlled by the piece of code. [6]
1.0 [4] 1998/12/28 BTX Chassis Design Guidelines 1.1 2007/02 BTX Interface Specification 1.0b 2005/07 BTX System Design Guide 1.1 2007/02/20 Chassis Air Guide (CAG) 1.1 2003/09 CompactFlash (CF) 5.0 2010 Common Building Block (for notebooks) 2005 Desktop and mobile Architecture for System Hardware (DASH) 1.1 2007/12 Desktop Management Interface ...
The Mark 1, and later the Mark 1A, Fire Control Computer was a component of the Mark 37 Gun Fire Control System deployed by the United States Navy during World War II and up to 1991 and possibly later. It was originally developed by Hannibal C. Ford of the Ford Instrument Company [1] and William Newell.
The first documented computer architecture was in the correspondence between Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace, describing the analytical engine.While building the computer Z1 in 1936, Konrad Zuse described in two patent applications for his future projects that machine instructions could be stored in the same storage used for data, i.e., the stored-program concept.
Faced with "past technical deficiencies in telecommunications systems and equipment and software…that were traced to basic inadequacies in the application of telecommunication standards and to the lack of a well defined…program for their review, control and implementation", the U.S. Department of Defense looked to develop a series of standards that would alleviate the problem.
Operator, Organizational, DS, and GS Maintenance Manual: Battery Control Central AN/MSW-8 (Pershing 1a Field Artillery Missile System) (PDF). United States Army. April 1969. TM 9-1427-381-14. Operator, Organizational, DS, and GS Maintenance Manual: Handling Equipment and Mounting Kits (Pershing 1a Field Artillery Missile System) (PDF). United ...
The DMTF CIM Profiles supported by the DASH 1.2 specification: [2] DASH is designed for desktop and mobile computer systems; a related DMTF standard for management of server computer systems is the Systems Management Architecture for Server Hardware (SMASH), with a similar set of CIM Profiles.