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hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
 
<ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in> wrote in message
news:1188901365.348426.208760@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
Design them so that they are resilient to brief power interruptions. 1 to
60 second power interruptions in many locations are frequent and require
re-programming of clocks ... a huge pain in the butt!
 
<ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in> wrote in message
news:1188901365.348426.208760@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
Hi, I am first time fucker! Can you please give me ideas on how to fuck? I
am waiting as I know you good fucker! please help me! I don't know how to
fuck!!
 
On Sep 4, 5:22 am, ARUN_405_2...@yahoo.co.in wrote:
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
Hi, Arun. Your best bet will be going to your department advisor with
this question, or to the teacher of the Senior Projects class. Either
one will be happy to spend a few minutes with you, giving ideas about
potentially successful projects.

Good luck
Chris
 
ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in wrote:
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
 
ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in wrote:
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.
Final year? We're all doomed. :-( How does someone spend three years in
school, allegedly learning about electronics _and_ computers, and then ask a
question like this? I know this is SEB and all, but geez.
 
On Tue, 04 Sep 2007 19:52:53 -0500, Jon Slaughter wrote:
ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in> wrote in message
news:1188901365.348426.208760@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.

Hi, I am first time fucker! Can you please give me ideas on how to fuck? I
am waiting as I know you good fucker! please help me! I don't know how to
fuck!!
Roll her in flour and look for the wet spot.

Good Luck!
Rich
 
On Tue, 4 Sep 2007 18:47:35 -0400, "Charles"
<charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote:

ARUN_405_2006@yahoo.co.in> wrote in message
news:1188901365.348426.208760@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
hi i am ARUN KUMAR final year ECE student.can u help in my final
project.can u send some projects regarding to microcontrollers.waiting
for ur valuable suggestions.

Design them so that they are resilient to brief power interruptions. 1 to
60 second power interruptions in many locations are frequent and require
re-programming of clocks ... a huge pain in the butt!
---
Ever heard of a real-time clock?


--
JF
 
Ever heard of a real-time clock?
Which fails during a momentary power outage? Battery backup is non-existent
in many consumer devices. They (the manufacturers) can't even bother to
include a decent energy storage capacitor on the dc supply circuit to smooth
out interruruptions of several seconds. The modern answering machine is a
prime example. The clock/calendar is mostly wrong. Here, in the septic
system where I live and swim, the power fluctuates (drops out for a second
or two) at least once a week and scrambles the clocks on the oven, the
microwave, and the answering machine.

If I designed and sold annoyingly loud and useless guitar amplifiers, I
suppose I could understand this at a much deeper level. But, only a very
few of us are so gifted.
 
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 21:58:53 -0400, Charles wrote:

Ever heard of a real-time clock?

Which fails during a momentary power outage? Battery backup is non-existent
in many consumer devices. They (the manufacturers) can't even bother to
include a decent energy storage capacitor on the dc supply circuit to smooth
out interruruptions of several seconds. The modern answering machine is a
prime example. The clock/calendar is mostly wrong. Here, in the septic
system where I live and swim, the power fluctuates (drops out for a second
or two) at least once a week and scrambles the clocks on the oven, the
microwave, and the answering machine.
I think that "real-time clock" was a reference to devices like the Dallas
Semiconductor clock modules, which included a lithium cell big enough to
keep the clock alive for several years. Do computer manufacturers still
use those?
 
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 21:58:53 -0400, "Charles"
<charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote:

Ever heard of a real-time clock?

Which fails during a momentary power outage? Battery backup is non-existent
in many consumer devices. They (the manufacturers) can't even bother to
include a decent energy storage capacitor on the dc supply circuit to smooth
out interruruptions of several seconds. The modern answering machine is a
prime example. The clock/calendar is mostly wrong. Here, in the septic
system where I live and swim, the power fluctuates (drops out for a second
or two) at least once a week and scrambles the clocks on the oven, the
microwave, and the answering machine.

If I designed and sold annoyingly loud and useless guitar amplifiers, I
suppose I could understand this at a much deeper level. But, only a very
few of us are so gifted.
---
Obviously. it appears you don't even know what a real-time clock is.

Here:

http://datasheets.maxim-ic.com/en/ds/DS1307.pdf

BTW, what's the reference to "annoyingly loud and useless guitar
amplifiers" about?



--
JF
 
On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 00:29:24 -0500, "Stephen J. Rush"
<sjrush@comcast.net> wrote:

On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 21:58:53 -0400, Charles wrote:

Ever heard of a real-time clock?

Which fails during a momentary power outage? Battery backup is non-existent
in many consumer devices. They (the manufacturers) can't even bother to
include a decent energy storage capacitor on the dc supply circuit to smooth
out interruruptions of several seconds. The modern answering machine is a
prime example. The clock/calendar is mostly wrong. Here, in the septic
system where I live and swim, the power fluctuates (drops out for a second
or two) at least once a week and scrambles the clocks on the oven, the
microwave, and the answering machine.

I think that "real-time clock" was a reference to devices like the Dallas
Semiconductor clock modules, which included a lithium cell big enough to
keep the clock alive for several years. Do computer manufacturers still
use those?
---
Dunno, but I do!

last one I used was a Dallas DS1307 on a medication dispensing
machine.


--
JF
 
"John Fields" <jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote in message
news:qtjve3dsrt7f24tc7l54q7snkc3c5uskle@4ax.com...
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 21:58:53 -0400, "Charles"
charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote:

Obviously. it appears you don't even know what a real-time clock is.

Here:

http://datasheets.maxim-ic.com/en/ds/DS1307.pdf

BTW, what's the reference to "annoyingly loud and useless guitar
amplifiers" about?
RTCs are well understood. Thanks for the link, in any case.

Look up "metaphor."
 
On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 19:11:45 -0400, "Charles"
<charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote:

"John Fields" <jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote in message
news:qtjve3dsrt7f24tc7l54q7snkc3c5uskle@4ax.com...
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 21:58:53 -0400, "Charles"
charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote:


Obviously. it appears you don't even know what a real-time clock is.

Here:

http://datasheets.maxim-ic.com/en/ds/DS1307.pdf

BTW, what's the reference to "annoyingly loud and useless guitar
amplifiers" about?

RTCs are well understood. Thanks for the link, in any case.
---
You're welcome, but your amplitude reference to "annoyingly loud and
useless guitar amplifiers" hasn't yet been defined.

Would you like to continue?


--
JF
 

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