Back when Cryix had 6x86 200 Mhz ceramic type processors. I had a random thought of mounting it to the top of the cover (underside). So I would have a spot to keep my coffie warm. Extending the socket would have been a minor problem tho.
Depending on what you want the computer to do. The PC/104 measures 3.8" X 3.6" consumes far less power than a standard PC system. Avaliable from a 8088 to Pentium type processor.
Use SCR's at every drive with a Resistor/Capacitor to time the gate. Each drive down the line would have a longer Time Constant. A.3 to.5 voltage drop shouldnt cause any problems.
Music and data CDs are bascially 1's and 0's imprinted on a disk. In theory could someone be able to use cloneCD or Nero (or other CD burning software) to burn an exact copy of the music disk? If so could possably strip the music content through software and store them as Mp3's.
If more CDs are being sold with anti-copying technologly in the music industry. Why not revert back to audio cassette where its all pure analog, and rip cd's from that source.
Bet the porn industry will find a use for the storage system
I feel the same way...I still have everything for my Commodore 128. The old GEOS software, NEVER crashed.
Back when Cryix had 6x86 200 Mhz ceramic type processors. I had a random thought of mounting it to the top of the cover (underside). So I would have a spot to keep my coffie warm. Extending the socket would have been a minor problem tho.
Depending on what you want the computer to do. The PC/104 measures 3.8" X 3.6" consumes far less power than a standard PC system. Avaliable from a 8088 to Pentium type processor.
http://www.pc104.com
http://www.pc104.org
Use SCR's at every drive with a Resistor/Capacitor to time the gate. Each drive down the line would have a longer Time Constant. A .3 to .5 voltage drop shouldnt cause any problems.
Music and data CDs are bascially 1's and 0's imprinted on a disk. In theory could someone be able to use cloneCD or Nero (or other CD burning software) to burn an exact copy of the music disk? If so could possably strip the music content through software and store them as Mp3's.
Has anyone tried this?
If more CDs are being sold with anti-copying technologly in the music industry. Why not revert back to audio cassette where its all pure analog, and rip cd's from that source.
try http://www.a1books.com They actually are cheaper than most other book places
And so was the old Commodore 64 that can do almost the same thing