| IP65:
|
international standard IEC 60529 classifies the level of protection
provided against the intrusion of solid objects (including
body parts like hands and fingers), dust, accidental contact,
and water. It consists of the letters IP (for "international
protection rating"[1], sometimes also interpreted as
"ingress protection rating") followed by two digits
and an optional letter.
The
digits ('characteristic numerals') indicate conformity with
the conditions summarized in the tables below. Where there
is no protection rating with regard to one of the criteria,
the digit is replaced with the letter X.
For
example, an electrical socket rated IP22 is protected against
insertion of fingers and will not be damaged or become unsafe
during a specified test in which it is exposed to vertically
or nearly vertically dripping water. IP22 or IP2X are typical
minimum requirements for the design of electrical accessories
for in-door use. The standard aims to provide users more detailed
information than vague marketing terms such as "waterproof". |
|
Rackmount :
|
A 19-inch rack is a standardized (EIA 310-D, IEC 60297 and
DIN 41494 SC48D) system for mounting various electronic modules
in a "stack", or rack, 19 inches (482.6 mm) wide.
Equipment designed to be placed in a rack is typically described
as rack-mount, a rack mounted system, a rack mount chassis,
subrack, or occasionally, simply shelf. The slang expression
for a subrack (generally 1U = 1.75 in = 44.45 mm height) is
"pizza box" due to the similarity in size and shape,
see also pizza box form factor. Most racks are sold in the
42U form: that is, a single rack capable of holding 42 1U
pizza box servers.
Because
of their origin as mounting systems for railroad signaling
relays, they are still sometimes called relay racks, but the
19-inch rack format has remained a constant while the technology
that is mounted within it has changed to completely different
fields. This standard rack arrangement is widely used throughout
the telecommunication, computing, audio, entertainment and
other industries, though the Western Electric 23-inch standard,
with holes on 1-inch centers, prevails in telecommunications.
Typically,
a piece of equipment being installed has a front panel height
1/32-inch (.03125") less than the allotted number of
U's. Thus, a 1U rackmount computer is not 1.75-inches tall
but is 1.71875-inches tall. 2U would be 3.46875-inches instead
of 3.5-inches. This gap allows a bit of room above and below
an installed piece of equipment so it may be removed without
binding on the adjacent equipment.
|
|
SATA:
|
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment (SATA, IPA: /'se?t?/
or /'sæt?/) is a computer bus primarily designed for
transfer of data between a computer and storage devices (like
hard disk drives or optical drives).
The
main benefits are thinner cables that let air cooling work
more efficiently, faster transfers, ability to remove or add
devices while operating (hot swapping), and more reliable
operation with tighter data integrity checks than the older
Parallel ATA interface.
It
was designed as a successor to the legacy Advanced Technology
Attachment standard (ATA), and is expected to eventually replace
the older technology (retroactively renamed Parallel ATA or
PATA). Serial ATA adapters and devices communicate over a
high-speed serial cable.
|
|
| LCD: |
Liquid
crystal displays
Liquid
crystals were first discovered in the late 19th century by
the Austrian botanist, Friedrich Reinitzer, and the term "liquid
crystal" itself was coined shortly afterwards by German
physicist, Otto Lehmann.
Liquid crystals are almost transparent substances,
exhibiting the properties of both solid and liquid matter.
Light passing through liquid crystals follows the alignment
of the molecules that make them up - a property of solid matter.
In the 1960s it was discovered that charging liquid crystals
with electricity changed their molecular alignment, and consequently
the way light passed through them; a property of liquids.
Since its advent in 1971 as a display medium,
liquid crystal displays have moved into a variety of fields,
including miniature televisions, digital still and video cameras
and monitors and today many believe that the LCD is the most
likely technology to replace the CRT monitor. The technology
involved has been developed considerably since its inception,
to the point where today's products no longer resemble the
clumsy, monochrome devices of old. It has a head start over
other flat screen technologies and an apparently unassailable
position in notebook and handheld PCs where it is available
in two forms:
high image quality thin film transistor (TFT). |
|
| Resolution |
This
is a basic measurement of how much information is on the screen.
It is usually described as "some number" by "some
number". The first "some number" is the horizontal
(across the screen) resolution and the second "some number"
is the vertical resolution (down the screen). The higher the
number, the better, since that means there is more detail.
Some examples:
NTSC VHS: 240 x 485
NTSC broadcast: 330 x 485
NTSC laserdisc: 425 x 485
ITU-R BT.601 (525/60): 720 x 485
Computer screen: 1280 x 1024
The
maximum definition a particular system is capable of reproducing.
Resolution is measured in the number of discrete observable
lines that can be reproduced on a system. The higher the resolution
a system is capable of producing, the sharper the picture
will appear. In TV, resolution is measured in vertical and
horizontal lines or the total number of observable black to
white line transitions observable in the picture. Horizontal
resolution is limited by the bandwidth of the television circuit,
while vertical resolution is limited by the total number of
TV scan lines. A high-resolution video camera or monitor can
display 700 horizontal lines of resolution and 480 vertical
lines or 700 x 480 resolution. While influenced by the number
of pixels in an image (for high definition approximately 2,000
x 1,000, broadcast NTSC TV 720 x 487, broadcast PAL TV 720
x 576), note that the pixel numbers do not define ultimate
resolution but merely the resolution of that part of the equipment.
The quality of lenses, display tubes, film process and film
scanners, etc., used to produce the image on the screen must
all be taken into account. This is why a live broadcast of
the Super Bowl looks better than a broadcast recorded and
played off of VHS, while all are NTSC or PAL.
Amount
of detail in the video image is measured along both the horizontal
and vertical axes. In digital systems, resolution is the number
of pixels on a display surface. Computer CRT resolutions are
usually given as the number of pixels per scan line and the
number of scan lines, e.g. 640 x 480. Video resolution is
measured in terms of lines of detail per horizontal scan line
(horizontal resolution) and total number of scan lines (vertical
resolution).
The
clarity or graininess of a video or computer image as measured
by lines or pixels; the smallest resolvable detail in the
image. The perceivable detail, or the ability of an image
reproducing system to reproduce fine detail
| Flat Panel size |
CRT size |
Typical resolution |
| 13" |
15" |
800x600 |
| 14" to 15" |
17" |
1024x768 |
| 17" |
21" |
1280x1024 |
|
|
| Touch screen - Environmental |
Temperature
Operating:
-10°C to 50°C
Storage: -40°C to 71°C
Functionality is not adversely affected within these operating
guidelines.
Relative Humidity
Functional operating limits: 90% RH at max 35°C
Functional storage limits: 90% RH at max 35°C for 240
hrs, noncondensing
Thermal Cycling
The touchscreen shall be capable of functioning normally after
the completion of fifty thermal cycles from room conditions
to 70° C, back to room temperature; and then to -40°
C and back to room temperature at a rate not to exceed 2º
C per minute and with a one hour soak at each temperature
extreme.
Immersion
The touchscreen shall be capable of functioning normally after
having its lower edge immersed in water containing 5% isopropyl
alcohol to a height one third of the overall height of the
touchscreen, for a period of six hours.
Water Spray
The touchscreen shall function normally and not be damaged
by running water applied to the active area.
Chemical Resistance
The active area of the touchscreen is resistant to the following
chemicals when exposed for a period of one hour at a temperature
of 70°F (21°C):
Industrial Chemicals
Acetone, Methylene chloride, Methyl ethyl ketone, Isopropyl
alcohol, Hexane, Turpentine, Mineral spirits, Unleaded Gasoline,
Diesel Fuel, Motor Oil, Transmission Fluid, Antifreeze.
Food Service Chemicals
Ammonia based glass cleaner, Laundry Detergents, Cleaners
(Fantastic, Formula 409, Joy, etc.), Vinegar, Coffee, Tea,
Grease, Cooking Oil, Salt.
Altitude
Operating
The touchscreen shall be capable of operating at an altitude
of 10,000 feet above sea level.
Storage
The touchscreen shall be capable of being stored without damage
at an altitude of 50,000 feet above sea level.
Vibration
The touchscreen shall not be damaged by being subjected to
a vibration of 0.01 inches peak to peak excursion, at a frequency
of 5 to 455 Hz, for a period of 15 minutes in each of three
axes.
Shock
The touchscreen, in its standard shipping container, shall
be capable of withstanding the drop test of Project 1A of
the National Safe Transit Association Program Pre-shipment
Test Procedures (10 drops from a height of 30 inches).
|
|
| |
| Touch screen - Physical Damage Resistance |
Impact
Strength
Spherical touchscreens, when supported on their four corners,
shall be capable of withstanding a load of 20 pounds applied
in the center of the active area through a stylus of one inch
diameter.
Distributed Load
Spherical touchscreens, when supported on their four corners,
shall be capable of withstanding a load, evenly distributed
over their surface, of 40 pounds. |
|
| |
| Resistive-type
Touch screen |
How
an AccuTouch Touchscreen Works
The Parts of a Touchscreen
The AccuTouch five-wire resistive touchscreen uses a glass
panel with a uniform resistive coating. A thick polyester
coversheet is tightly suspended over the top of a glass substrate,
separated by small, transparent insulating dots. The coversheet
has a hard, durable coating on the outer side and a conductive
coating on the inner side.
What
Happens During a Touch

When
the screen is touched, it pushes the conductive coating on
the coversheet against the coating on the glass, making electrical
contact. The voltages produced are the analog representation
of the position touched.
How
the Touchscreen Controller Interprets Screen Measurement
When the controller is waiting for a touch, the resistive
layer of the touchscreen is biased at +5V through four drive
lines, and the coversheet is grounded through a high resistance.
When the touchscreen is not being touched, the voltage on
the coversheet is zero. The voltage level of the coversheet
is continuously converted by the analog-to-digital converter
(ADC) and monitored by the microprocessor on the controller.
When
the touchscreen is touched, the microprocessor detects the
rise in the coversheet voltage and begins converting the coordinates
as follows:
A
The microprocessor places the X drive voltage on the touchscreen
by applying +5V to pins H and X and grounding pins Y and L.
An analog voltage proportional to the X (horizontal) position
of the touch appears on the cover sheet at pin S of the touchscreen
connector. This voltage is digitized by the ADC and subjected
to an averaging algorithm, then stored for transmission to
the host.
B Next, the microprocessor places the Y drive voltage on the
touchscreen by applying +5V to pins H and Y and grounding
pin X and L. An analog voltage proportional to the Y (vertical
position of the touch) now appears on the coversheet at pin
S of the touchscreen connector. This signal is converted and
processed as described above for the X position
Why
the Averaging Algorithm is Important
The averaging algorithm reduces noise resulting from contact
bounce during the making and breaking contact with the touchscreen.
Successive X and Y samples are tested to determine that their
values differ by no more than a certain range. If one or more
samples fall outside this range, the samples are discarded
and the process is restarted. This is continued until several
successive X samples (then Y samples) fall within the range.
The average of these values is used as the X and Y coordinates
respectively.
Once
independent X and Y samples are obtained, coordinate pairs
are sampled to eliminate the effects of noise. If a sample
does not fall within an internal range, all X and Y coordinates
are discarded and the independent X and Y sequence is restarted.
Once acceptable coordinates have been obtained, an average
coordinate is determined and communicated to the host processor.
Video
Alignment
The X and Y values are similar to Cartesian coordinates, with
X increasing from left to right and Y increasing from bottom
to top. These absolute coordinates are arbitrary and unscaled,
and will vary slightly from touchscreen to touchscreen. The
AccuTouch controller can be calibrated for video alignment.
This aligns the touchscreen coordinate system with the display
image, reorients each axis, and scales the coordinates before
they are transmitted to the host computer.
X-
and Y-axis Measurements Originate from the Glass
AccuTouch five-wire technology utilizes the bottom glass substrate
for both X- and Y-axis measurements. The flexible coversheet
acts only as a voltage-measuring probe. This means that the
touchscreen will continue working properly even with nonuniformity
in the cover sheet's conductive coating. The result is an
accurate, durable, and reliable touchscreen that offers drift
free operation.
|
|
| NEMA
Rating: |
NEMA
4:
Type
4 enclosures are intended for indoor or outdoor use primarily
to provide a degree of protection against windblown dust and
rain, splashing water, and hose directed water; and to be
undamaged by the formation of
ice
on the enclosure.
NEMA 12:
Type
12 enclosures are intended for indoor use primarily to provide
a degree of protection against dust, falling dirt, and dripping
noncorrosive liquids.
|
|
| Disk
On Module: |
Disk
On Module:
products
are fully IDE-Compatible Flash Disks that can be integrated
onto any Single Board Computer. Which are designed to replace
conventional low capacity disk drives or M-Systems SSD Disk-On-Chip
Flash. These units are suitable for industrial applications
and harsh environments, since they are more durable than conventional
hard disk drives.

|
|
| PC104: |
PC/104 is simply a repackaged, modular version of the PC architecture
intended for embedded applications where space, power consumption
and reliability are critical. These modules can serve as a
mezzanine bus for an embedded SBC or it can become the entire
computer and I/O system.
A PC/104 module is an Industry Standard Architecture (ISA)
bus board reduced to 3.6 x 3.8-inch (90 x 96-mm) that is approximately
the size of a 3.5-in diskette. The bus signal definitions
and timing are the same. PC/104's P1 bus has 64 pins just
like the PC-XT and is combined with 40-pins on P2 for full
AT-compatibility.

|
|
| VESA
Mounting: |
The VESA® FDMI™ Standard defines mounting interfaces,
hole patterns and associated cable/power supply locations
for LCD monitors, Panel PCs and other flat panel devices.
VESA MIS-D, 100/75, C compliant monitors are equipped
with either a 100 x 100 mm or 75 x 75 mm mounting hole pattern.

|
|
| Rack
Cabinet: |
A special type of cabinet in which equipment is installed.
Most common are racks that will accept equipment that is 19
inches across with places for it to be screwed into the front.
Many rack will have ground busses, power strips and back doors.
Some will provide air conditioning vents.

|
|
| Rack
Unit (EIA standard): |
One rack unit or U is 1.75 inches in height. Most 19"
rack equipment in broadcasting is specified to be mounted
in increments of Us in heighth. For example, 2 Us would be
3.5 inches high.

|
|
| RS-232: |
ANSI standard defining the single-ended (unbalanced)
interconnection scheme for serial data communications. |
|
| RS-422: |
A
medium range (typically up to 300 m/1000 ft or more) balanced
serial data transmission standard. Data is sent using an ECL
signal on two twisted pairs for bi-directional operation.
Full specification includes 9-way D-type connectors and optional
additional signal lines. RS-422 is widely used for control
links around production and post areas for a range of equipment. |
|
| S-Video: |
A
medium range (typically up to 300 m/1000 ft or more) balanced
serial data transmission standard. Data is sent using an ECL
signal on two twisted pairs for bi-directional operation.
Full specification includes 9-way D-type connectors and optional
additional signal lines. RS-422 is widely used for control
links around production and post areas for a range of equipment. |
|
| Tablet
PC: |
A Tablet PC is a notebook or slate-shaped mobile computer. Its touchscreen
or graphics tablet/screen hybrid technology allows the user to operate
the computer with a stylus or digital pen, or a fingertip, instead
of a keyboard or mouse.
The
form factor offers a more mobile way to interact with a computer.
Tablet PCs are often used where normal notebooks are impractical
or unwieldy, or do not provide the needed functionality. |
| Analog
To Digital: |
An analog-to-digital converter (abbreviated ADC, A/D or A
to D) is an electronic integrated circuit, which converts
continuous signals to discrete digital numbers. The reverse
operation is performed by a digital-to-analog converter (DAC).
Typically,
an ADC is an electronic device that converts an input analog
voltage (or current) to a digital number. The digital output
may be using different coding schemes, such as binary, Gray
code or two's complement binary. However, some non-electronic
or only partially electronic devices, such as rotary encoders,
can also be considered ADCs. |
|
| Uninterruptible
power supply: |
An uninterruptible power supply (UPS), also known as an uninterruptible
power source or a battery backup is a device which maintains a continuous
supply of electric power to connected equipment by supplying power
from a separate source when utility power is not available. There
are two distinct types of UPS: off-line and line-interactive (also
called on-line).
An
off-line UPS remains idle until a power failure occurs, and then
switches from utility power to its own power source, almost instantaneously.
An on-line UPS continuously powers the protected load from its reserves
(usually lead-acid batteries), while simultaneously replenishing
the reserves from the AC power.
The
on-line type of UPS, in addition to providing protection against
complete failure of the utility supply, provides protection against
all common power problems, and for this reason it is also known
as a power conditioner and a line conditioner.
While
not limited to safeguarding any particular type of equipment, a
UPS is typically used to protect computers, telecommunication equipment
or other electrical equipment where an unexpected power disruption
could cause injuries, fatalities, serious business disruption or
data loss. UPS units come in sizes ranging from units which will
back up a single computer without monitor (around 200 VA) to units
which will power entire data centers or buildings (several megawatts).
Larger UPS units typically work in conjunction with generators. |
| |
| IP65: |
international standard IEC 60529 classifies the level of protection
provided against the intrusion of solid objects (including
body parts like hands and fingers), dust, accidental contact,
and water. It consists of the letters IP (for "international
protection rating"[1], sometimes also interpreted as
"ingress protection rating") followed by two digits
and an optional letter.
The
digits ('characteristic numerals') indicate conformity with
the conditions summarized in the tables below. Where there
is no protection rating with regard to one of the criteria,
the digit is replaced with the letter X.
For
example, an electrical socket rated IP22 is protected against
insertion of fingers and will not be damaged or become unsafe
during a specified test in which it is exposed to vertically
or nearly vertically dripping water. IP22 or IP2X are typical
minimum requirements for the design of electrical accessories
for in-door use. The standard aims to provide users more detailed
information than vague marketing terms such as "waterproof". |
| Rackmount : |
A 19-inch rack is a standardized (EIA 310-D, IEC 60297 and
DIN 41494 SC48D) system for mounting various electronic modules
in a "stack", or rack, 19 inches (482.6 mm) wide.
Equipment designed to be placed in a rack is typically described
as rack-mount, a rack mounted system, a rack mount chassis,
subrack, or occasionally, simply shelf. The slang expression
for a subrack (generally 1U = 1.75 in = 44.45 mm height) is
"pizza box" due to the similarity in size and shape,
see also pizza box form factor. Most racks are sold in the
42U form: that is, a single rack capable of holding 42 1U
pizza box servers.
Because
of their origin as mounting systems for railroad signaling
relays, they are still sometimes called relay racks, but the
19-inch rack format has remained a constant while the technology
that is mounted within it has changed to completely different
fields. This standard rack arrangement is widely used throughout
the telecommunication, computing, audio, entertainment and
other industries, though the Western Electric 23-inch standard,
with holes on 1-inch centers, prevails in telecommunications.
Typically,
a piece of equipment being installed has a front panel height
1/32-inch (.03125") less than the allotted number of
U's. Thus, a 1U rackmount computer is not 1.75-inches tall
but is 1.71875-inches tall. 2U would be 3.46875-inches instead
of 3.5-inches. This gap allows a bit of room above and below
an installed piece of equipment so it may be removed without
binding on the adjacent equipment.
|
| SATA: |
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment (SATA, IPA: /'se?t?/
or /'sæt?/) is a computer bus primarily designed for
transfer of data between a computer and storage devices (like
hard disk drives or optical drives).
The
main benefits are thinner cables that let air cooling work
more efficiently, faster transfers, ability to remove or add
devices while operating (hot swapping), and more reliable
operation with tighter data integrity checks than the older
Parallel ATA interface.
It
was designed as a successor to the legacy Advanced Technology
Attachment standard (ATA), and is expected to eventually replace
the older technology (retroactively renamed Parallel ATA or
PATA). Serial ATA adapters and devices communicate over a
high-speed serial cable.
|
| |
| USB: |
Universal Serial Bus (USB) is a serial bus standard to interface
devices. A major component in the legacy-free PC, USB was
designed to allow peripherals to be connected using a single
standardized interface socket and to improve plug-and-play
capabilities by allowing devices to be connected and disconnected
without rebooting the computer (hot swapping). Other convenient
features include providing power to low-consumption devices
without the need for an external power supply and allowing
many devices to be used without requiring manufacturer specific,
individual device drivers to be installed.
USB
is intended to help retire all legacy varieties of serial
and parallel ports. USB can connect computer peripherals such
as mouse devices, keyboards, PDAs, gamepads and joysticks,
scanners, digital cameras, printers, personal media players,
and flash drives. For many of those devices USB has become
the standard connection method. USB is also used extensively
to connect non-networked printers; USB simplifies connecting
several printers to one computer. USB was originally designed
for personal computers, but it has become commonplace on other
devices such as PDAs and video game consoles. In 2004, there
were about 1 billion USB devices in the world.[1]
The
design of USB is standardized by the USB Implementers Forum
(USB-IF), an industry standards body incorporating leading
companies from the computer and electronics industries. Notable
members have included Apple Inc., Hewlett-Packard, NEC, Microsoft,
Intel, and Agere.
|
|
|
|
USB:
|
Universal Serial Bus (USB) is a serial bus standard to interface
devices. A major component in the legacy-free PC, USB was
designed to allow peripherals to be connected using a single
standardized interface socket and to improve plug-and-play
capabilities by allowing devices to be connected and disconnected
without rebooting the computer (hot swapping). Other convenient
features include providing power to low-consumption devices
without the need for an external power supply and allowing
many devices to be used without requiring manufacturer specific,
individual device drivers to be installed.
USB
is intended to help retire all legacy varieties of serial
and parallel ports. USB can connect computer peripherals such
as mouse devices, keyboards, PDAs, gamepads and joysticks,
scanners, digital cameras, printers, personal media players,
and flash drives. For many of those devices USB has become
the standard connection method. USB is also used extensively
to connect non-networked printers; USB simplifies connecting
several printers to one computer. USB was originally designed
for personal computers, but it has become commonplace on other
devices such as PDAs and video game consoles. In 2004, there
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