Entries Tagged 'parallel Cards' ↓
October 29th, 2011 — parallel Cards
October 27, 2011 02:57 PM Eastern Daylight Time
BOULDER, Colo.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–LifePics today announced an exclusive partnership with Photobucket that enables millions of Photobucket users to order photo products through the LifePics Network, including a variety of photo prints, photo books, photo cards, canvas prints, photo calendars and other photo gifts. Photobucket, the world’s leading dedicated photo and video sharing service, will deliver expanded print and photo products to its more than 100 million users in a simple, convenient ordering interface.
“Our audience is looking for simple and easy ways to share their life stories, and our partnership with LifePics is the perfect complement to our suite of uploading, editing and sharing tools, as Photobucket users can now easily order their favorite photos from their Photobucket accounts”
“Our audience is looking for simple and easy ways to share their life stories, and our partnership with LifePics is the perfect complement to our suite of uploading, editing and sharing tools, as Photobucket users can now easily order their favorite photos from their Photobucket accounts,” said Tom Munro, CEO at Photobucket. “Photobucket and LifePics are both in the business of helping people capture, share and preserve their favorite memories, so the partnership was a natural fit for both companies.”
the new service from LifePics significantly expands Photobucket’s previous print and photo product selection. Photobucket users can now order dozens of prints, from standard sizes to large posters, as well as a variety of sizes and styles of photo books, hundreds of personalized greeting cards and templates for any occasion, plus hundreds of photo gifts ranging from coffee mugs to t-shirts, mouse pads, canvas prints and photo jewelry. the companies are offering a free shipping promotion through October for orders over $25 (promo code: freeshipping).
“Photobucket customers will see an added benefit of having LifePics as a partner because they have more choices than before,” said Rick Patch, president and CEO at LifePics. “By partnering with Photobucket, LifePics continues to expand its scope beyond the basic online-to-retail model. Our business is helping established photo retailers and e-tailers give more choices and convenience to their customers through our photo ordering portal. This partnership with Photobucket is particularly gratifying.”
For more information about LifePics, visit LifePics.com.
For more information about Photobucket, visit Photobucket.com.
October 9th, 2011 — parallel Cards
Taipei, Taiwan (September 22, 2011)
August 17th, 2011 — parallel Cards
Two 50 kW Power Block prototypes with covers removed. Each power block consists of IGBT switches, a gate driver circuit, DC bus film capacitors, current sensors, DC bus voltage sensor, a heat sink temperature sensor, a digital controller board, bussing and connectors – all mounted on an air-cooled heat sink. Credit: Dennis Schroeder
The sun makes sidewalks hot enough to fry eggs, the wind blows hard enough to tear fences, but if solar and wind energy can’t be converted to the 60-hertz alternating current (AC) standard in the United States, it can’t be connected to the grid for use in homes or offices.
That’s where the inverter fits in, a device that takes that distributed energy and turns it into grid compatible AC power.
If the United States is to generate a significant amount of the nation’s electricity from clean energy, the inverter must be smarter, more flexible and a whole lot cheaper.
The U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, with industrial partner Semikron, and with funding from the California Energy Commission, has developed a prototype of a 50-kilowatt inverter. inside is a 50-kW modular power block the size of a microwave oven that can be included with a photovoltaic array, small wind turbine, battery charger, fuel cell or flywheel and control the flow of energy onto the electric grid.
NREL’s 50 kW Power Blocks will be housed in inverter cabinets as shown in this photo. the power block rests above the air-intake blower and below the AC and DC protection devices, an accessory rack and air-out fans. the entire package is about 6 feet high, 2
July 31st, 2011 — parallel Cards
Will this work ? Who makes a suitable adapter ?
XP Pro PC to use CAT 5 ( 10 meter ) then to convert to existing USB Parallel Printer Cable to run Epson EPL6200L laser. Cable run is too long at 10 meters for USB & don't have any space in the ducting for a USB extender at the 5 meter mark.
Thanks , Richard
bzboyz.com
gearxs.com
newegg.com
Printer Cables … UR-2000M2 (2ft USB to DB9 Male RS232 Serial Adaptor Cable) … Also support Mini DisplayPort 1.1a compliant receiver offering 5.4 Gbps bandwidth over 2 lanes, and video resolution up to 1080p. it has integrated triple 10-bit, 162 MHz video DAC fo analog VGA signal output.
June 30th, 2011 — parallel Cards
My laptop is a M7301u Gateway -
radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=3502493&tab=techSpecs
Some games run slowly and I was wondering if I could expand my graphics. theirs is (I think) a PCI expansion slot on the underside. All the graphics cards I looked at online have moniter and other outputs, but this slot seem only like an independent unit. Basically, can I put a new graphics card into the compter, do they come that small. Should I buy another computer that does?
if so, give me a name of one of the best cards that works.
thank you
The specs for that computer say nothing about a PCI slot, or graphics expansion. Most laptops have just regular video cards, not gaming video cards, and are usually not expandable. There are higher-end laptops that have gaming video, but they do cost more – you get what you pay for….
I think you are out of luck…..
I don't think you can graphics mod a laptop especially with a good graphics card. the PCI slot isn't supposed to be used for graphics cards now a days the slot used is called PCIe or PCI 2.0. Now if you have a way to externally to attach to this slot you might have a chance.