On 05/26/2015 09:27 PM, Kyle Owen wrote:
Yes, there does appear to be a name for them: the 163 connector.
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~hilpert/e/powerConn/index.html
Thanks - that's the critter!
My modified calculator cable is probably the Japanese calculator type,
although it seems to work OK
Right now, I'm cursing the guy who thought that the cloverleaf or
mouseketeer power receptacle was a good idea. I'm sitting here
looking at an HP ScanJet wondering if it would be worth the effort to
replace it.
Fer heaven's sake, what was wrong with the IEC connector?
If you mean the
On May 26, 2015 8:28 PM, Brent Hilpert hilp...@cs.ubc.ca wrote:
On 2015-May-26, at 7:27 PM, Kyle Owen wrote:
Yes, there does appear to be a name for them: the 163 connector.
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~hilpert/e/powerConn/index.html
Big thanks to our own Brent Hilpert for the great
On 26/05/2015 03:02, Ethan Dicks wrote:
On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 8:07 PM, Michael Thompson
michael.99.thomp...@gmail.com wrote:
Today we pulled all of the M113 flip-chips and tested them
Do you have any writeups on Warren's FLIP-CHIP tester?
I'd be very interested too, especially since I'm
If you do end up building a custom solution, I have a feature request :-)
It would nice if the device was also a frame grabber that could, under
command, snap one or more frames of the legacy video and export it over
USB perhaps.
This would allow us to document operation of legacy software with
On May 26, 2015, at 14:07 , Chris Elmquist chr...@pobox.com wrote:
If you do end up building a custom solution, I have a feature request :-)
It would nice if the device was also a frame grabber that could, under
command, snap one or more frames of the legacy video and export it over
USB