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Whitepaper
Best Practices for Networking Automation Computers
Summary: Automation computers can be anywhere, and do very many things. Modern automation computers are connected to networks that may be connected to other networks throughout the plant, and via TCP/IP to the entire world.
.Views:
110087
.Date:
7/24/2008
.Rate:
View
Chasing Moore’s Law – The Truth Behind the OS and CPU Upgrades for Industrial PC Users
SUMMARY: The COTS effect has been almost as big a revolution as that signaled by the phrase uttered by Alexander Graham Bell, “What hath God wrought?” COTS is a three letter acronym that stands for “Commercial, Off The Shelf,” and the COTS revolution has changed commercial computing, created personal computing, impacted telecommunications, and made huge changes in the industrial environment. Most of these changes have been incredibly beneficial. Some have made technologies practical and affordable for applications that were unthinkable thirty years ago. Some have been problematic and some have caused significant FUD. (FUD is another three letter acronym, standing for Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.) This white paper discusses the effect of the ever-changing OS on industrial computers.
.Views:
4672
.Date:
4/28/2008
.Rate:
View
The Advantages of Small Form Factor HMI
SUMMARY: As embedded computers have become ubiquitous, so too the need for human machine interfaces has grown. Once found in only complex control systems, like distributed control systems in refineries and other process plants, HMI systems are now found in many guises and many locations, from games to industrial machines and tooling systems, with many stops in between. This white paper addresses the increased demand for Small Form Factor HMIs and how they are being used.
.Views:
4671
.Date:
4/28/2008
.Rate:
View
Carrying Serial Devices into the Future
SUMMARY: First in the laboratory, and then on the plant floor, serial digital communication was the earliest means of data transmission from device to device. What's the future?
.Views:
4671
.Date:
4/28/2008
.Rate:
View
Save with the Right Distributed Motion Control
SUMMARY: In today’s automation applications, it seems there’s no room for dumb machines and there’s plenty of space for intelligent choices. A case in point is distributed motion control, in which intelligence and control are pushed out from a central server to the edges of an automation system. There are some very good, bottom line reasons for doing this, as it can save significant time and money. This white paper addresses making the right choices on distributed motion control that will save you time, effort, and money.
.Views:
31960
.Date:
4/28/2008
.Rate:
View
Don’t Get Run Over: The Evolution of PC Bus Technologies
SUMMARY: Over the last decade, there's been an increasing trend toward the use of PC-based automation solutions. In the early 1990's, large automakers and other manufacturers began using standard PCs for machine control.
.Views:
4670
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Embedded Hardware and OS Technology Empower PC-based Platforms
SUMMARY: Everywhere we look we find computers. Many of them don't look like traditional desktops, or laptops. In industrial infrastructure, we find them in displays, in networking appliances, in machine controllers, in HMIs and in industrial controllers and PACs (programmable automation controllers). We find them in low power, portable devices, and even in field transmitters.
.Views:
4670
.Date:
4/23/2008
.Rate:
View
Get on the Bus: USB in Industrial Applications
SUMMARY: For industrial automation users, technology giveth and taketh away. On one hand advances in semiconductors and software result in smarter and more capable computer and machines, making the job of automating a process easier and more robust. On the other hand, those same advances spell trouble. The answer to this question maybe the USB.
.Views:
2490
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Gigabit Ethernet: Meeting the Future with Increased Bandwidth
SUMMARY: Much has been written about the use of Ethernet in manufacturing. Ethernet has been around a long time. For computers and networking, it has been around practically forever. One of the great benefits of this fact is the time-tested and de-bugged nature of the Ethernet protocol for networking. Since the mid-1990s, Ethernet networks have become ubiquitous. They are used in offices, in homes, in workplaces, in building automation, and with increasing dominance, not just frequency, on the factory floor.
.Views:
4669
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
High Bright Displays...Get The Picture!
SUMMARY: In the old adage, seeing is believing. In today’s modern industrial applications, seeing is more than that. It’s the essence of control, since the human machine interface (HMI) involves the presentation of visual information. That’s why there’s such a demand for high bright displays in highly customized industrial computers and in stand alone industrial monitors.
.Views:
4669
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Production Monitoring and Data Mining - No Strip Mining Allowed!
SUMMARY: Any manufacturing or process plant has many sources of production data, and that data, if kept, very soon becomes voluminous.
.Views:
2490
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Programmable Automation Controllers Find Their Niche...Everywhere!
SUMMARY: In the beginning there was the relay and the timer. And in the process industries, there was the hardwired controller. Then, there was the Programmable Logic Controller (PAC). Today, it's the Programmable Automation Controller (PAC).
.Views:
4669
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Thanks for the Memories - Storage Media in Industrial Applications
SUMMARY: When it comes to data storage for industrial applications, users no longer have to go around in circles. They now have a choice between rotating magnetic media – hard disk drives with spinning platters – and flash memory
.Views:
3585
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
The Evolution and Elements of Robust PC-Based Control
SUMMARY: The combination of declining PC prices and increased robustness of operating systems and softlogic control applications have resulted in enormous growth in PC-based control since the mid-1990s. But while the basic PC is standardized, not all PCs are equal – particularly when it comes to operating reliably in industrial environments...
.Views:
4670
.Date:
4/15/2008
.Rate:
View
Windows XP for Embedded Applications
SUMMARY: The embedded version of Windows XP is a componentized version of the well-known Windows XP Professional operating system. Instead of ev