Sciologness The most complete collection of drivers for your computer! |
Audio data is communicated to the board using I²S bus. The modular EVM is also compatible with the 5-6KINTERFACE and HPA-MCUINTERFACE boards from Texas Instruments. Third party boards such as the HPA449 demonstration board from SoftBaugh, Inc. And the Speedy33 ™ from Hyperception. Download citation. Copy link Link copied. The flow is in charge to select one correct driver template from the library, and then to configure and specialize it in order to produce the source. I gave this little presentation at GDevCon#2 and the video is linked below. This article briefly explains the presentation and is a good placeholder for the example code. History and Perspective I started with a brief history and described the different types of state machine. Hyperception Dallas, TX (214) 343-8525 www.hyperception.com Development toolkit CCE-SDT is a development toolkit for the ARM family of microprocessors and cores. It can be used for developing and benchmarking code, software sim-ulation of code execution, download-ing code to target by means of a debug monitor, and debugging with a JEENI emulator.
Drivers Catalog ⇒ Laptops & Desktops ⇒ Olivetti ⇒ CL133A Drivers for laptop Olivetti CL133A: the following page shows a menu of 22 devices compatible with the laptop model CL133A, manufactured by 'Olivetti'. To download the necessary driver, select a device from the menu below that you need a driver for and follow the link to download. List of Olivetti CL133A Devices
Top Drivers for Olivetti CL133AWe have compiled a list of the most popular drivers (according to downloading stats) for various devices installed to Olivetti CL133A laptops. Once you find the needed driver in this list, feel free to download it directly from this page by clicking at ‘Download’ button.
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Electronic Design Software |
While the links on the Internet EE Information page provide access to a vast array of engineering software and utilities, this page just has information and convenient links to a couple of the most sought-after packages: MicroSim's(r) evaluation version of Pspice, and schematic/PCB editors such as PADS Schematic and PCB software. Links to other design & simulation software are at the end of this page.
I am not an expert on any software listed here. Except for PADS, my experience ends with installing these packages. Specific questions about Spice should be directed elsewhere. Please explore the links here before e-mailing any other questions.UN-L EE Students: If you don't have the PKUNZIP.EXE program needed to unpack files, copy it from the Z:UTILS subdirectory on the PCs in the Nebraska Hall user rooms. Download any software either directly to floppy disks (make sure you have enough space) or to a subdirectory on the hard drive.(Please note: this page concentrates on a couple versions of Pspice for 80x86 series computers: a more comprehensive list of Spice sources that includes other computing platforms can be read here. )Also, the latest versions of MicroSim's software can be found here. Also, Intusoft has a demo version of their ICAP/4Windows available.Versions 6.0 of Pspice Design Center for Windows : Unzip each of the following three files onto three floppy disks to recreate the installation disks for this version.
- Disk #1 (1.03Mb)
- Disk #2 (1.2Mb)
- Disk #3 (840Kb)
Version 6.2 for Windows appears to be available from ftp://klingon.ee.iastate.edu/pub/pspice/ as self-extracting zip files. I have not tried these and do not know if which files you need, or whether they need to be extracted onto 'installation floppies' instead of simply unpacking into a program directory.
I've got an old PC, no Windows, no math chip . . .is there a version of Pspice I can run? You bet. The following are the self-extracting archive files you need. These DON'T create installation disks; you should create a directory for Pspice on your hard drive, copy these files into it, and run them one at a time. Click on these links:- Pspice 5.3 digital/analog file #1, PSEV53D1.EXE (460K)
- Pspice 5.3 file #2, PSEV532.EXE (388K)
- Pspice 5.3 file #3, PSEV533.EXE (370K)
- Pspice 5.3 file #4, PSEV534.EXE (233K)
- Pspice 5.3 file #5, PSEV535.EXE (327K)
With a floppy in a diskette drive (we'll assume drive A:), type
PKZIP -& A:PSPICE F:APPSPSPICE*.* [Enter]
It will prompt you to keep inserting floppies until it's compressed the whole Pspice 5.4 directory contents into one big .ZIP file that spans several diskettes. To unpack it, put the first disk in a drive on your computer at home (again, let's assume drive A:), create a directory called C:PSPICE (or whatever you want), change into that directory with CD PSPICE and then type
PKUNZIP A:PSPICE [Enter]
It'll ask you for the floppies it needs till it's done. Make sure you read the README.DOC file.
Where to get it . . .
You can download compressed archives of these floppies right now from the Web, but there are some special considerations with the PADS files that other archived files don't have and that you must take into account to be able to install it on your machine. To download the three PADS disks:
- If you are using Mosaic or xmosaic, find and activate the Optionsmenu item that says Load to disk Lynx or Netscape software should figure out that the links you will use aren't Web documents and will ask you if you want to just download them, and yes, you do. Then click on the following links.
- Download: (from Oakland's SimTel archive)
PADSLOG.ZIP (1.08M), the schematic editor;
PADSPCB.ZIP (1.03M), the PCB layout program; and
PADSLIB.ZIP (488K), the library files and programs that both of these use. - (If Oakland/SimTel is busy, try the following :
PADSLOG.ZIP (1.08M)
PADSPCB.ZIP (1.03M)
PADSLIB.ZIP (488K)(NOTE: these files are found in many other on-line archives if the above links don't work. Do a search for these file names at Shareware.com ).
- Un-select the Load to Disk menu option so you can continue to use Mosaic normally.
- These are archived images of the installation disks that MUST be uncompressed to floppy disks in a certain way before you can use them to install PADs. The program PKUNZIP must be in your computer's path to unpack these. The EE PC lab computers should have PKUNZIP on them.
- Make sure you are in the directory on C: that you downloaded the files into. Now put a floppy in a drive and change to that drive. We'll assume you are using drive A:, so put the disk in A: and type
A: [Enter] - Unpack the downloaded archives with the command
PKUNZIP -D C:PADSLOG
Repeat for the other two archives using 'C:PADSPCB' and 'C:PADSLIB' on the command line instead of 'C:PADSLOG': each of the three files will require it's own floppy. The '-D' switch on the line recreates the directory structure needed on the floppy disk, and without this the program will not be installable. - Now you have the installation disks. The PADSLOG and PADS PCB disks both have a program named PINSTALL on them that you run to install the programs. It's pretty self-explanatory, but be advised that you have to perform the 'Hardware Installation' for both the Logic and PCB packages before you run them. VIDEO TIP: many VGA adapters seem to work fine with the Paradise 800x600 setting in PINSTALL.
- What about instructions? The PADSLOG and PADSPCB disks each have a file named DOCS.EXE on them, but they are not identical. They are self-extracting archives of the tutorial files and PINSTALL does NOT copy them over when installing the program. Put each of the two floppies into the drive in turn, make sure that you are in the PADSDEMO directory on C: (that's the default directory) and then type A:DOCS [Enter] You will end up with files named MANUAL.LOG and MANUAL.PCB. These are NOT comprehensive reference manuals: they are each tutorial files about 40 pages long. You are advised to read them and do the examples. PADS is NOT a program that you can just run and figure out on the fly. You can read the manuals on-line right here: PADS PCB and PADS Logic.
A Few Tips . . .
A few hints to reduce frustration when first using PADS can be read here. - Incidentally, to run the programs you have to use the batch files provided: type LOGICS [Enter] to run PADS Logic and PCBS [Enter] to run the PCB program.
- I got the following e-mail regarding PADS installation on newer, faster systems: '..this time of re-installing Pads from the floppies, it would not install and I would get an error of 'Could not find this file. May not be in Path.' when it tried to copy the files off the floppies. Something in my start-up was running the set up too fast, and the set up couldn't keep up (or so it appears), as the programs were not being copied from source to destination but the set up program thought it had. Doing a Shft-F5 at start-up (or reboot) to a clean DOS prompt solved the problem.'
A somewhat newer version of PADS can apparently be had: I've got no experience with it. To learn about it, read padstdx.txt and then get these three files to unpack according to the instructions:
padstdx1.zip (750K)
padstdx2.zip (1105K)
padstdx3.zip (909K)
Some notes from PADS Software themselves: 'Here's a guy who taught with that system and wrote a workbook for it..
Asst. Prof. Marc Herniter
Northern Arizona University
Electrical Engineering Dept.
Flagstaff, AZ 86011-1560 (602) 523-2300
The new program is not exactly shareware, needs 486dx and at least 16 meg MINIMUM for the windows port. Don't expect to have an easy time with it either, this is meant to be walked onto a site by a salesperson, demoed and left to be considered by customer..but people are using it.'
AutoDesk's AutoCAD computer drafting program is found on a lot of University computers, including the Mechanical Engineering PC room machines. The E.E. Shop developed AutoCAD-PCB, (72K), a package of scripts, predefined blocks, and instruction for doing PCB design with AutoCAD. Some exerpts from the documentation that discuss general aspects of using software to make boards can be read here. Also, some additions and modifications by an AutoCAD-PCB user can be seen here.In addition, here are links to the home pages for- 916 Design CAD Libraries to OrCAD and Protel EDA software users;
- Abstraction Software's DaVinci RF design tool;
- AMS Electronic Design's EZ-ROUTE Software ;
- Ansoft Corporation EDA;
- Ansys Finite Element Analysis;
- Avista Design Systems Tools that simplify analog & RF circuit design;
- Barrenger Software, maker of the CRO Tutor;
- Bartels Autorouter & design tools (with working demos available);
- BEST PROTO electronics design and prototyping ;
- CADware, PADS reseller, CAD utilities & services;
- Capilano Computing, quality, low-cost ECAD, free demo software (fully functional 'lite' version);
- CAI TRAINING RESOURCES
- CIRCAD design software;
- Micro Nation Software makers of CircSolver;
- CircuitOnline CAD index;
- CMH Software, ladder logic simulation;
- CODA Crystal Oscillator Design and Analysis;
- CSiEDA Analog & Digital Circuit/PCB design ;
- Custom Software Creators and their Semiconductor Cross Reference Library v7.0a;
- Data I/O, makers of Synario PLD design & simulation software;
- dTb Software™ application specific CAE/EDA tools for electrical engineering;
- Douglas CAD/CAM, System for Macintosh PCB Design;
- DSP Development , graphical data analysis software;
- ExpressPCB , Free PCB layout editor for Win95 & low cost PC board manufacture ;
- EZ-ROUTE , integrated CAE software;
- Harmonic Software Inc. Makers of O-Matrix, an interactive analysis and visualization environment.
- Hyperception, DSP software for real-time and simulation dsp and EE applications;
- Intusoft , makers of ICAP/4Windows ;
- Ivex , Windows based EDA tools
- Jovian Software's graphical DSP design software and hardware;
- Logical Devices , CUPL logic design ;
- Maple
- MATCOM (Matlab-to-C++ generator)
- Matlab
- MathSoft , (producers of Mathcad)
- MathSource , (a source of Mathematica files)
- MathWare (producers of Derive)
- McCAD EDA Software
- MetalMan , (electronics sheet metal chassis design software)
- Microcode , (makers of CircuitMaker® 'virtual electronics lab')
- Mike's Windows Spice port ;
- PIA , PCB design software;
- Mohamed's Utilities ;
- PALasm ;
- Protel Schematic & PCB design;
- RF, (an inexpensive RF analog design tool for students and amateurs)
- Router Solutions, Inc. , (provider for translator tools of CAE/CAD/CAM interface programs);
- Sage EDA Corporation, PCB design software for Windows and MacOS;
- Schematica Software, makers of Filter Wiz;
- Semiconductor Cross Reference Library v7.0a ,
- Siborg Systems Inc. , makers of MicroTec-3.02 for Windows: 2D Semiconductor Process/Device Simulator;
- SwitchMin, boolean-expression to logic schematic converter;
- Technical Data Systems, technical database with specs for more than 70,000 electronic components;
- Trilogy Design , makers of Parts&Vendors personal parts list manager ,
- TuneKit® for Windows , ( electronic filter synthesis program)
- TurboSim® , (circuit simulation tool);
- Virtual Micro Design Universal Microprocessor Program Simulator ; and
- WinPlace, freeware 3D placement/thermal analysis sofware.