Newsletter: May 4, 2007
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| The Solid State Advantage |
| Why Choose Solid State? |
| Solid state components have a superior resistance to normal wear and tear as well as the ability to endure high levels of shock and vibration. They also are highly resistant to the damaging effects of dust, dirt, and humidity. These do extremely well in harsh, remote environments because of the reduced threat of hardware failure. By configuring your platform as solid state, you extend the lifetime and reliability of that system, greatly decreasing cost and eliminating time spent on replacing faulty equipment. |
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| Emphase Industrial Flash Disk Modules |
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The new Emphase flash disk modules can now fully support most operating systems, such as Windows XP, thanks to an accelerated R/W endurance cycle of 4,000,000 times and a wear leveling algorithm that prevents frequent rewriting to a specific flash page. These are industrial-grade units with a fast data transfer rate, wide temperature range, and outstanding permanence. We have a broad gamut of storage capacities available in both 40- and 44-pin versions.
See the Emphase Industrial Flash Disk Modules
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| VIA vmpc vm7700 Fanless Barebone System |
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The VIA vm7700 is an ultra-slim, fanless system optimally constructed for digital signage applications. It has a sleek, black chassis, which mounts flush against the back of a VESA standard LCD display. It is equipped with VIA's 1.5 GHz C7 Eden processor and advanced CX700M integrated chipset. Increase the lifetime and durability of the DS700 and configure it as solid state; use a 44-pin flash disk drive as an alternative to a 2.5" HDD.
See the VIA vmpc vm7700
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| Configuring a Solid State System |
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A solid state system has no moving parts. With the advance of low-power, yet high-performance processors, fanless cases, and the use of flash memory as an alternative to a hard drive, solid state is painlessly easy to achieve. You can either plug a flash disk module directly into the mainboard IDE port, or attach an IDE CompactFlash adapter to replace a hard drive. We stock a variety of Flash Memory with a range of capacity options.
See the FAQ: How do I build a solid state system?
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