Designing Cards and Drivers for the Macintosh Family

Designing Cards and Drivers for the Macintosh Family
Author: Apple Computer, Inc
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Total Pages: 690
Release: 1992
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

This is an essential reference for Macintosh developers designing expansion cards, peripheral devices, and drivers. This new edition is revised to provide up-to-date expansion guidelines for the entire Macintosh family, including the newest members.

Macintosh Family Hardware Reference

Macintosh Family Hardware Reference
Author:
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Total Pages: 468
Release: 1988
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

The Macintosh Family Hardware Reference provides the most accurate and complete information on the hardware configurations for all Macintosh computers, including the Macintosh II and the Macintosh SE.

Inside Macintosh

Inside Macintosh
Author: Apple Computer, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Longman
Total Pages: 578
Release: 1994
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

Here is essential guidance for writing software that interacts with built-in and peripheral hardware devices. It covers critical hardware and device programming topics and provides background information important to anyone using the File, Sound, Printing, or AppleTalk Managers.

The APDAlog

The APDAlog
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 158
Release: 1991
Genre: Apple computer
ISBN:

Hardware-Software Co-Synthesis of Distributed Embedded Systems

Hardware-Software Co-Synthesis of Distributed Embedded Systems
Author: Ti-Yen Yen
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1475753888

Embedded computer systems use both off-the-shelf microprocessors and application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) to implement specialized system functions. Examples include the electronic systems inside laser printers, cellular phones, microwave ovens, and an automobile anti-lock brake controller. Embedded computing is unique because it is a co-design problem - the hardware engine and application software architecture must be designed simultaneously. Hardware-Software Co-Synthesis of Distributed Embedded Systems proposes new techniques such as fixed-point iterations, phase adjustment, and separation analysis to efficiently estimate tight bounds on the delay required for a set of multi-rate processes preemptively scheduled on a real-time reactive distributed system. Based on the delay bounds, a gradient-search co-synthesis algorithm with new techniques such as sensitivity analysis, priority prediction, and idle- processing elements elimination are developed to select the number and types of processing elements in a distributed engine, and determine the allocation and scheduling of processes to processing elements. New communication modeling is also presented to analyze communication delay under interaction of computation and communication, allocate interprocessor communication links, and schedule communication. Hardware-Software Co-Synthesis of Distributed Embedded Systems is the first book to describe techniques for the design of distributed embedded systems, which have arbitrary hardware and software topologies. The book will be of interest to: academic researchers for personal libraries and advanced-topics courses in co-design as well as industrial designers who are building high-performance, real-time embedded systems with multiple processors.

Inside Macintosh

Inside Macintosh
Author: Caroline Rose
Publisher:
Total Pages: 812
Release: 1991
Genre: Macintosh (Computer)
ISBN: