z.B. für stromsparenden Software-Router s.a. gebrauchtes WRAP-Board oder FOX-Board (für Anderes) oder http://www.soekris.com/
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IDE to CompactFlash adapters
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https://shop.bytemine.net/alix/alix-2d13-komplettpaket-cf.html
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http://pcengines.ch/alix2d13.htm
This seems difficult, at first glance, but really, it’s not. At all. From the time you get all your hardware plugged in to the time you’re doing some massive parallel processing, depending on your needs, can be anywhere from 2 hours to 10 minutes. And
PortForward.com is proud to offer help setting up port forwarding on your router or firewall. Many Internet users are not aware of how to configure their router or firewall in order to use applications like Peer-to-Peer file sharing (PtoP), Internet Games
Manufacturer of computer hardware and software including SPARC processors, SPARC and Opteron powered servers and workstations, Java and the Solaris Operating Environment.
This post takes a look at the speed - latency and throughput - of various subsystems in a modern commodity PC, an Intel Core 2 Duo at 3.0GHz. I hope to give a feel for the relative speed of each component and a cheatsheet for back-of-the-envelope performance calculations. I’ve tried to show real-world throughputs (the sources are posted as a comment) rather than theoretical maximums. Time units are nanoseconds (ns, 10-9 seconds), milliseconds (ms, 10-3 seconds), and seconds (s). Throughput units are in megabytes and gigabytes per second. Let’s start with CPU and memory, the north of the northbridge:
(buckling spring mechanism) http://www.overclock.net/computer-peripherals/491752-mechanical-keyboard-guide.html auch nett: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yg3s77nAMQ http://mykeyboard.co.uk/microswitch/ Tim Tyler benutzt übrigens Fußpedale am Computer für PageUp/Down