Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Specctra is a commercial PCB auto-router originally developed by John F. Cooper and David Chyan of Cooper & Chyan Technology, Inc. (CCT) in 1989. [2] The company and product were taken over by Cadence Design Systems in May 1997.
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. (stylized as cādence) [2] is an American multinational technology and computational software company. [3] Headquartered in San Jose, California, [2] Cadence was formed in 1988 through the merger of SDA Systems and ECAD. [3]
Because the federal government has funded the development of FalconView, it is a nonproprietary "government off-the-shelf" (GOTS) application and is free of any license fees for government use. This includes the use of the Software Developers Kit (SDK) which documents the interfaces for use by government developers and contractors working on ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
An aircraft flight manual (AFM) is a paper book or electronic information set containing information required to operate an aircraft of certain type or particular aircraft of that type (each AFM is tailored for a specific aircraft, though aircraft of the same type naturally have very similar AFMs). The information within an AFM is also referred ...
Dassault Falcon 7X; Embraer E-Jet family; Embraer E-Jet E2 family (Epic 2) Gulfstream G350/G450; Gulfstream G500/G550; Gulfstream G650/G650ER; Hawker 4000; Pilatus PC-24 (Epic 2) While primarily designed for jet aircraft, the Epic cockpit is also used on the AgustaWestland AW139 medium helicopter, which is certified for single-pilot IFR ...
Spectre is a SPICE-class circuit simulator owned and distributed by the software company Cadence Design Systems. It provides the basic SPICE analyses and component models. It also supports the Verilog-A modeling language. Spectre comes in enhanced versions that also support RF simulation and mixed-signal simulation (AMS Designer).
The second-generation Macintosh, launched in 1987, came with colour (and greyscale) capability as standard, at two levels, depending on monitor size—512×384 (1/4 of the later XGA standard) on a 12" (4:3) colour or greyscale (monochrome) monitor; 640×480 with a larger (13" or 14") high-resolution monitor (superficially similar to VGA, but at ...