Atom Processor
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HOME MULTIMEDIA
Home multimedia provides a user-friendly multimedia experience to complement the management of energy consumption in the home communications. OpenFrame 7E using ZigBee Smart Energy home area network standards to help consumers improve their energy efficiency by giving them the tools to manage their energy consumption more precisely using automation and near real-time information .
"Intel Atom processor makes it possible to provide an attractive user experience and superior graphics capabilities on the market-leading speed in a sleek and sophisticated device," said Dan Gittleman, CEO of OpenPeak. "By introducing an intuitive touch screen navigation for ease of Common household controls such as thermostats and other home equipment interface, while maintaining the inherent energy efficiency, energy management OpenFrame 7E turned into a pleasant experience and entertaining."
In the home, home energy management solutions OpenPeak provides a simple user-friendly real-time display of energy use and prices, as well as a centralized interface for communication with other home devices (eg, thermostat, appliances, water heaters, etc..) Through Wi-Fi or ZigBee. OpenPeak provides the communication bridge that connects the utility network home area network.
For consumers, the media platform and OpenPeak provides communications center that provides various services outside the energy management that helps to create long-term user engagement. For utilities providers, Intel Atom-based distributed processing allows OpenFrame 7E locally to achieve operational and data transmission efficiency.
Consumption and use of devices to collect data from various meters and devices in every home. OpenFrame 7E then filter and collect data to send only the required or most relevant information about usage patterns back to the utility to remove the burden transmit all household consumption data.
In addition, the platform offers application OpenPeak-driven system to activate the release of new energy management services to customers. By utilizing OpenPeak's back-end services platform, a utility can hold a new application or update that could include the monitoring of renewable energy, electric vehicle charging, prepaid electricity bills and much more.
"Intel's Open Energy initiative to encourage the industry to promote the application of technology and global open standards that accelerate the transition to smart energy," said Ryan Parker, director of marketing, and Embedded Intel Communications Group. "OpenPeak's OpenFrame 7E platform ZigBee Sensible Vitality qualifications is a fantastic example of it. At Intel, we want to allow energy consumers to take a more active role in managing their own consumption and provide a sustainable system to reduce energy consumption and environmental impact."
Does anyone know if an netbook Intel Atom processor can with stand high and low temperatures?
A group and I are creating a robot to work in Antarctica to test weather patterns, collect samples, and take pictures. We were planning to use a small net book with an Intel Atom Processor with a solid slate hard drive with out the screen. We want to know if the components in Net book can with stand low temperatures in Antartica.
Most processors can withstand sub-zero temperatures. Overclockers and benchmark fanatics typically cool their processors with CO2 or liquid Nitrogen. I'm not too sure with the PCB/motherboard. It might be the weak link when subjected to very low temperatures.
Perhaps a good thermal enclosure that would help trap the small amount of heat generated by the netbook circuitry can somehow bring temperature to manageable level.
CompuLab Fit-PC3 comes in many flavors of AMD, starting at $328 (Engadget)
The march of the mini PCs continues, this time with a pumped-up little number
from CompuLab. We've already reported on the Fit-PC3, which forgoes the Atom
and Tegra 2 of previous models in favor of AMD's APUs, but it's only now that
full pricing has been divulged. You're looking at $328 for the cheapest
barebones nettop, which includes the fan-less case, motherboard and a 1GHz
single-core processor with integrated Radeon HD 6290 graphics. Sure, some
rivals might be cheaper, but the Fit-PC3 has above-average connectivity,
including USB 3.0 and eSATA ports, HDMI, DisplayPort and digital audio out, as
well as gigabit Ethernet and mini-serial. If you want a more powerful APU, or
if you're too busy to go rummaging for your screwdriver, then there are plenty
of dual-core and pre-built options up to $700 at the source link. Be advised
though, only the pilot batch is currently available and end-users are being
advised to wait a little longer.
CompuLab Fit-PC3 comes in many flavors of AMD, starting at $328 originally
appeared on Engadget on Sat, 26 Nov 2011 08:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms
for use of feeds.
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