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Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2005 |
Data Recorders Expanded with CompactPCI VMETRO is offering a new addition to its high-speed data-recorder family now offering to bring 385 megabytes per second and flexibility to the CompactPCI form factor. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics April 2010 |
6U VME Computer Boards Based on Freescale QorIQ P4080 Microprocessor Introduced by Curtiss-Wright The computer board provides as many as eight Power Architecture processor cores and data-path acceleration logic, as well as network and peripheral bus interfaces. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2008 |
Curtiss-Wright Introduces Rugged FPDP Board The cards, available in PCI and XMC mezzanine formats, are for digital signal processing, radar and sonar, medical imaging, as well as range and telemetry systems. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2008 Andrew Reddig |
Serial FPDP sensor data link scales up to 20 gigabytes per second The ANSI/VITA 17.1-2003, or serial Front Panel Data Port, allows many applications to use an open standard but still fit within the severe space, weight, and power limitations typically found for imaging focal plane arrays, RF antennas, or other external sensors. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2009 Courtney E. Howard |
Secure Information Storage Military and aerospace equipment designers have a wealth of options available to fill the ever-increasing need for secure data storage in the field. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2008 John McHale |
Curtiss-Wright Controls announces another VPX win Officials at Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing won their second military design-in of their VPX products for a U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems program application |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2005 Ben Ames |
Military storage designers call for hard drives Disk drives are still getting denser-slowly-but they easily outstrip solid-state for price and capacity. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2005 |
PCI radar input card Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing is offering the Osprey PCI, a radar input card that interfaces radar systems to the Curtiss-Wright line of radar-processing and display devices. |
AskMen.com |
Top 4 DVD Recorders Under $300 They were high-end luxuries just a few months ago, but the prices of DVD recorders have plunged to less than $300 -- and they're still dropping. Read the hands-on CNET reviews to find out which one is best for you. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2005 |
Letter In previous coverage of new developments at Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing, the "build vs. buy" issue was inadvertently left out of the published article, possibly leaving the reader with an erroneous impression. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2008 |
TEK Microsystems debuts FPDP I/O module The JazzFiber-V5 module provides a solution for single and multichannel ANSI/VITA 17.1-2003 Serial FPDP interfaces with the hardware, firmware, and software features to support the emerging VITA 17.2 standard for Serial FPDP extensions. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2004 John Keller |
Curtiss-Wright Consolidates Company Acquisitions Into 'Centers of Excellence' The Gastonia, N.C.-based provider of sensors and motion control, is strengthening their company's presence in the embedded computer market by consolidating several well-known brand names. |
AskMen.com |
Top 5 Affordable DVD Recorders Here's a quick look at five inexpensive, set-top DVD recorders, including the newest entry-level decks from category leaders Panasonic and Pioneer. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 |
FPDP IP Core Support for FPGA Products Officials of Vmetro are offering a serial front-panel data port (FPDP) IP core for use on Vmetro's range of Xilinx Virtex-II Pro-based FPGA products. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2005 Estro Vitantonio |
Military and aerospace component manufacturers learn from the commercial market Military and commercial component suppliers traditionally have done business in different ways. Not so much anymore, however. And the changes are all for the better. |