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Interface Works
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CNV-10 Framing G.703/V.35 Interface Converter from GAO
Toronto, Canada–GAO Comm’s (www.GAOComm.com) CNV-10 interface converter is a G.703/V.35 converter, which continuously converts a N×64k data stream to E1 PCM signals with transmission rate of up to 2048kbps. This converter is designed to support transparent non-frame structure E1 transmission.
The advanced CNV-10 interface converter displays local normal working status and alarm status, and supports internal and external and line clock as well. It can conduct local analog loop and long distant loop. Continuous time slot distribution of CNV-10 depends on the data terminal rate.
For more information about GAO’s CNV-10 interface converter, please visit www.GAOComm.com or contact sales@GAOComm.com
About GAO Comm
GAO Comm is an international leading provider of communication test instruments, equipment and devices that serve the needs of communication infrastructure, installation and maintenance.
For more information please visit http://www.GAOComm.com.
For any media queries:
Director of Marketing,
416-292-0038 ext 228
marketing@GAOComm.com
GAO Comm is a member of GAO Group, which also includes
• GAO RFID Inc. ? http://www.GAORFID.com
• GAO Tek Inc. ? http://www.GAOTek.com
• GAO Research Inc. ? http://www.GAOResearch.com
• GAO RFID Asset Tracking ? http://www.GAORFIDAssetTracking.com
• GAO Embedded ? http://www.GAOEmbedded.com
• GAO Instruments ? http://www.GAOInstruments.com
• GAO Fiber Optics ? http://www.GAOFiberOptics.com
Toronto, Canada–GAO Comm’s (www.GAOComm.com) CNV-10 interface converter is a G.703/V.35 converter, which continuously converts a N×64k data stream to E1 PCM signals with transmission rate of up to 2048kbps. This converter is designed to support transparent non-frame structure E1 transmission.
The advanced CNV-10 interface converter displays local normal working status and alarm status, and supports internal and external and line clock as well. It can conduct local analog loop and long distant loop. Continuous time slot distribution of CNV-10 depends on the data terminal rate.
For more information about GAO’s CNV-10 interface converter, please visit www.GAOComm.com or contact sales@GAOComm.com
About GAO Comm
GAO Comm is an international leading provider of communication test instruments, equipment and devices that serve the needs of communication infrastructure, installation and maintenance.
For more information please visit http://www.GAOComm.com.
For any media queries:
Director of Marketing,
416-292-0038 ext 228
marketing@GAOComm.com
GAO Comm is a member of GAO Group, which also includes
• GAO RFID Inc. ? http://www.GAORFID.com
• GAO Tek Inc. ? http://www.GAOTek.com
• GAO Research Inc. ? http://www.GAOResearch.com
• GAO RFID Asset Tracking ? http://www.GAORFIDAssetTracking.com
• GAO Embedded ? http://www.GAOEmbedded.com
• GAO Instruments ? http://www.GAOInstruments.com
• GAO Fiber Optics ? http://www.GAOFiberOptics.com
About the Author
About GAO Comm
GAO Comm Inc., a member of GAO Group, is a leading provider of telecommunication
testers, optical and electronic measurement instruments, electronic products that serve the
needs of electronic professionals internationally. For further information, please visit
http://www.gaocomm.com
Is there a way to force Windows Vista to run the Aero interface?
I am running a laptop with an Intel 915/910GMS graphics. Can anyone tell me if it is possible to force the Aero interface to work? I would love to see it on mine since my father's system can.
What version of Vista are you running? Aero is only available on Premium and above.
I take it 915/910GMS is intergrated? If so, then forget it. You won't run Aero on intergrated graphics as it's pretty demanding!
From Vista's own Help:
What hardware is recommended to run Windows Aero?
1-GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
1 gigabyte (GB) of random access memory (RAM)
128-MB graphics card
Aero also requires a DirectX 9 class graphics processor that supports a Windows Display Driver Model Driver, Pixel Shader 2.0 in hardware, and 32 bits per pixel.
For best results, you might also want to follow these graphics processor recommendations:
64 megabytes (MB) of graphics memory to support a single monitor with a resolution that is less than 1,310,720 pixels (for example, a 17–inch flat panel LCD monitor that has a 1280 × 1024 resolution)
128 MB of graphics memory to support a single monitor with a resolution from 1,310,720 to 2,304,000 pixels (for example, a 21.1–inch flat panel LCD monitor that has up to a 1600 × 1200 resolution)
256 MB of graphics memory to support a single monitor with a resolution greater than 2,304,000 pixels (for example, a 30–inch wide-screen flat panel LCD monitor that has up to a 2560 × 1600 resolution)
A list of supported GPU's:
Water May Not Run Uphill, But It Practically Flies Off New Surface
Engineering researchers have crafted a flat surface that refuses to get wet. Water droplets skitter across it like ball bearings tossed on ice. The inspiration? Not wax. Not glass. Not even Teflon. Instead, University of Florida engineers have achieved what they label in a new paper a "nearly perfect hydrophobic interface" by reproducing, on small bits of flat plastic, the shape and patterns of ...
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