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  • ZT 8907 Single Board Computer with IntelDX4? Microprocessor Hardware User Manual
  • This manual describes the operation and use of the ZT 8907 Single Board Computer with IntelDX4? Microprocessor. The following summarizes the focus of each major section in this manual. Chapter 1, “Introduction,” introduces the key features of the ZT 8907. It includes a product definition, a list of product features, a functional block diagram, and a description of each block. Chapter 2, “Getting Started,” provides a summary of the information needed to install and configure your ZT 8907. Chapter 3, “STD Bus Interface,” presents a detailed description of the ZT 8907 interface to the STD-80 and STD 32 bus architectures. The topics discussed include compatibility, interrupt structure, and multiple master operation. Chapter 4, “Interrupt Controller,” describes the two Intel-compatible 8259 cascaded interrupt controllers. This chapter summarizes the interrupt sources and the interrupt controllers’ register addressing. Chapter 5, “Counter/Timers,” discusses the six programmable counter/timers. It includes a diagram of the counter/timer architecture, and a summary of the operating modes and the programmable registers. Chapter 6, “DMA Controller,” provides an overview of ZT 8907 DMA architecture and briefly describes the DMA controller programmable registers. Chapter 7, “Real-Time Clock,” lists the major features of the real-time clock and briefly describes the real-time clock programmable registers. Chapter 8, “Serial Controller,” discusses operation of the two serial ports and briefly describes the programmable registers. Chapter 9, “Parallel Printer Port Interface,” describes the different modes for the Centronics-compatible printer interface. Address mapping, interrupt selection, and programmable registers are also discussed. Chapter 10, “Parallel I/O,” discusses the general
  • Processing WSDL in Python
  • Web Services Description Language (WDSL), originally developed by IBM, Microsoft, and others, is an XML format for technical description of Web services. In this tutorial, Mike Olson and Uche Ogbuji introduce WSDL4Py, an open-source Python library for WSDL 1.1 hosted by IBM developerWork's open-source zone. Usage of the library is explained, as well as discussion of its development. Setting up WSDL4Py The prerequisites for using the WSDL4Py library and the examples in this tutorial are as follows: *A working knowledge of the Python programming language, and WSDL. *Python: version 2.0 or more recent is highly recommended, but 1.5.2 will work as well. *4Suite: version 0.11 or more recent. The software should work under UNIX and Windows. Unfortunately, Macintosh users must wait for someone to port the XPath library of 4Suite to that platform, or wait for 4Suite-0.11.1 that will have a pure Python XPath parser Installation is quite simple. Download and unpack the archive, then run the command python setup.py install, which will copy the library to the appropriate location in your PYTHONPATH. To test the installation, run the following command: $ python -c "import wsdllib" Reading WSDL descriptions WSDL provides the means of giving descriptions to Web services. These descriptions are normally stored in a UDDI registry so that they can be looked up by other services. For the sake of simplicity in our examples, we will consider a standalone implementation without the use of a UDDI registry. The first use of the WSDL library implemented in our project is to read and parse the contents of
  • RealObjects PDFreactor Manual
  • RealObjects PDFreactor is a powerful formatting processor that enables server-side PDF creation from XML and XHTML/HTML documents using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) to define page layout and styles. You can dynamically generate PDF documents such as reports, invoices, statements and others on-the-fly. Since PDFreactor runs on your server, the end-user does not need any software other than a Web browser with a free PDF viewer. By implementing the W3C specification for Paged Media and print, PDFreactor provides great control over the paged output via CSS. It is very easy to set page sizes, margins and pagination for specific elements, page headers and footers. Using proprietary configuration and CSS properties, it is possible to set PDF specific information, to generate outlines and links for your documents and even to add meta information about the author or keywords. PDFreactor is provided as a Java library. The PDFreactor Java API is perfectly complemented by a .NET and a PHP API which enable a smooth cooperation of PDFreactor and your web applications. Being an integrator or developer with focus on Java, Servlet, EJB, CGI, PHP or .NET programming, you can easily integrate PDFreactor into your servlet, EJB or Web Service by using the comprehensive APIs at your disposal. In the simplest case you only have to specify an input and output file to generate a PDF document. It is also possible to use the operating system's standard input (stdin) and output (std-out) streams to read and write content. This is especially useful when using PDFreactor with
  • Halo 2 Vista FAQ Games Cheats Hints & Trainer PC pdf
  • Bungie isn’t famous for the speed of porting games from Xbox to PC and Halo 2 makes no exception. It was originally launched in November 2004 for the Xbox console and Microsoft announced it as a launch title for Windows Vista in the second quarter of 2007. Either they are really slow or they have modified the game beyond any resemblance with its counterpart. We present here a small collection of information under the clever disguise of a FAQ. Q: What systems is Halo 2 for Windows Vista available for? A: As the name suggests, Halo 2 Vista will be brought to PCs with Windows Vista only. Of course you can always purchase Halo 2 for your Xbox or Xbox 360. There are currently no plans to bring Halo 2 to Mac, Playstation 9, or the Commodore 64. Q: Will Halo 2 Vista players be able to play against Halo 2 Xbox players? A: No, Halo 2 Vista players will only be able to [play] against Vista owners. Q: Does Halo 2 Vista support the Xbox 360 Controller? A: Yes, the Xbox 360 controller will be fully supported by Halo 2 Vista. Q: What are the minimum system requirements for Halo 2 Vista? A: The Halo 2 Vista team is still hard at work fine-tuning the game so at this time, we cannot give details on the minimum system requirements, but we’ll let you know as soon as the picture becomes clearer. Required: Windows(R): Vista - 512 MB RAM Processor: Pentium
  • Microsoft Cuts Off Access To Old Documents
  • Tucked in with the many security updates (and the restoration of one's ability to paste text from a web page into a Word document!), a very interesting modification to the Office 2003 software waits quietly for installation with Service Pack 3. Unbeknownst to the user installing this “Pack 3”, their Office software is about to be imbued with a runaway power: the cutoff of access to your old documents. With the blink of a 117 MB download (and an even lengthier installation process), Office users will no longer be able to open files in 24 older file formats. That means users – citizens, government employees, small business owners, etc. – will not be able to open their own documents saved in file formats used by Corel (Wordperfect), Lotus, and most versions of MS Office products before 2000. Instead, users will see the not-so-user-friendly statement below: "You are attempting to open a file type that is blocked by your registry policy setting." When a user attempts to open one of these older files, they will receive the above in a dialog box and no alternative actions are given to help users get access to their information in these “blocked” files. When pressed for answers regarding this change, Microsoft eventually admitted that their action was in response to concerns with their parsing of Office 2003 code that presented a risk, but only after they suggested the move was in response to security concerns with the files themselves. Microsoft continues, in our view, to erroneously maintain that
  • ShopBot Users Guide Manual
  • The Basic ShopBot Control Panel Installing the USB to Serial Adapter Drivers Installing the Software Starting Up The Basic ShopBot Command Principle Entering Values (Parameters) So Let’s Run a Part File Getting Help The Layout of Your ShopBot Table: Directions, Distances, and Base Coordinates The Logic of XYZ Giving Directions; ABSOLUTE vs RELATIVE distance You Can Reorganize Your “Graph Paper” Temporary Zero Points When Cutting Files Table Base Coordinates vs Current Working Coordinates Software Limit Checking Maintaining Accurate XYZ Locations Changing the Direction of Movement of an Axis Software Axis Designation Optional 4th or 5th Axis or Channel Inches or Millimeters What Your Tool Can Do Giving Action Commands Changing Settings and Values (Commands) Utility Commands ShopBot Part Files ( .sbp) What’s in a Part File Using the Editor Automatic Recording of Things You Do at the Keyboard Don’t Let this Scare You Creating Part Files from other Software From Your Ideas to a ShopBot Product (… creating your Part File) Representation to Realization A First Project: Surfacing Your Table Working with Your Computer Working with Your Tool Speeds, Feed-Rates and Rapid-Positioning Acceleration and Deceleration ‘Ramping’ Direction of Cut and Tool Path Tooling Mounting Routers, Spindles, Lasers or Others Tools Clamping Your Material Dust Collection Working with Accessories Input Switches, Limit Switches and STOP Inputs ShopBot’s Remote ‘Stop’ Button Output Switches Additional Axes, Rotary Indexers, Lathes 3-D Digitizing (Probing Surfaces) Working with the ShopBot Converters Starting a Conversion Specific Info for Each Type of Conversion Conversion from HPGL Plotter File
  • BoonDocker Nitrous System Harley Davidson Installation Instructions
  • BoonDocker Liquid Nitrous ? 1589 Hollipark Dr. Idaho Falls, ID 83401 ? (208) 542-4411. website: www.boondockers.com - email: info@boondockers.com ... Download pdf
  • Debugging PHP using Eclipse and PDT
  • The PHP Development Tools (PDT) plug-in, when installed with Eclipse Europa, gives you that ability to quickly write and debug PHP scripts and pages. PDT supports two debugging tools: XDebug and the Zend Debugger. Learn how to configure PDT for debugging PHP scripts and discover which perspectives you use when taking closer looks at your scripts. This tutorial demonstrates how to configure the PHP Development Tools (PDT) plug-in for Eclipse to debug your PHP scripts. It also introduces the perspectives you'll use (namely, PHP Debug) when taking closer looks at your PHP scripts. Objectives After completing this tutorial, you'll be able to set up either XDebug — an open source project that allows you to debug executable scripts and scripts running on a Web server — or the Zend Debugger in Eclipse using the PDT project to develop PHP applications. You'll understand the various parts of the PDT project's PHP Debug perspective and learn how to set up, view, and work with breakpoints. You also learn how to inspect the values of variables as you are stepping through the code, as well as how to debug PHP Web applications on your local server so you can run through your PHP Web application with the debugger. Prerequisites To get the most out of this tutorial, you should have done a bit of PHP development. But what matters more is that you've done software development in general. You'll understand the debugging concepts better if you're familiar with debugging any other language. I wrote this to be helpful
  • Web 2.0 Re-examined: The Paradigm Shift, Technology Stack and Business Value
  • This essay re-examines web 2.0 by looking at its technology stack and impact on enterprise computing, in contrast to the common consumer-centric point of view. Categorizing the landscape into Consumer Web 2.0 and Enterprise Web 2.0, the essay establishes a web 2.0 technology stack that forms the foundation of a paradigm shift called “architecture of partition”. In the end, the business impact of web 2.0 technologies on enterprises is presented. Web 2.0: the State of Confusion Web 2.0 is exciting, but there are lots of confusions today, even among noted experts. There are two schools of opinions among experts. The first school is critical of Web 2.0. This group is represented by Tim Berners-Lee and Russell Raw. Their opinions are: 1. There is nothing fundamentally different between “Web 1.0” and the so-called “Web 2.0”; 2. Web 2.0 has nothing new and is based on the same technology as of Web 1.0; 3. Web 2.0 is just a piece of jargon. The second group of experts are Web 2.0 champions. This group is represented by Tim O’Reilly, Paul Graham and Dion HinchCliffe. This group argues that: 1. Web 2.0 is here and it is big; 2. “Architecture of Participation”, “the Network Effect (social network)”, and “Harnessing the collective intelligence” are fundamentally new and different from web 1.0; 3. Web 2.0 is more about a paradigm shift in how people use the web, less about new technology. “Web 2.0” is not based on a technology shift, but rather a usage paradigm shift. Despite the confusion, the term “Web 2.0” is getting widely
  • Web 2.0 Principles and Best Practices
  • In 2004, we realized that the Web was on the cusp of a new era, one that would finally let loose the power of network effects, setting off a surge of innovation and opportunity. To help usher in this new era, O’Reilly Media and CMP launched a conference that showcased the innovators who were driving it. When O’Reilly’s Dale Dougherty came up with the term “Web 2.0”during a brainstorming session, we knew we had the name for the conference. What we didn’t know was that the industry would embrace the Web 2.0 meme and that it would come to represent the new Web. Web 2.0 is much more than just pasting a new user interface onto an old application. It’s a way of thinking, a new perspective on the entire business of software—from concept through delivery, from marketing through support. Web 2.0 thrives on network effects: databases that get richer the more people interact with them, applications that are smarter the more people use them, marketing that is driven by user stories and experiences, and applications that interact with each other to form a broader computing platform. The trend toward networked applications is accelerating. While Web 2.0 has initially taken hold in consumer-facing applications, the infrastructure required to build these applications, and the scale at which they are operating, means that, much as PCs took over from mainframes in a classic demonstration of Clayton Christensen’s “innovator’s dilemma” hypothesis, web applications can and will move into the enterprise space. Two years ago we launched