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Spotlighting the Deep Muscle Stimulator Jake W. Pivaroff, DC, discusses the Deep Muscle Stimulator, a new therapeutic machine he has (More) Jake W. Pivaroff, DC, discusses the Deep Muscle Stimulator, a new therapeutic machine he has developed to provide relief for people suffering from chronic pain and restricted movement. The DMS uses percussion, mechanical vibrations that reach deep into the muscle tissue to stimulate proprioceptive functions. For more information on this, and to see other interviews from CSM, visit http://www.therapytimes.com. (Less)
MSP430F5xx microcontrollers provide breakthrough ... Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) (NYSE: TXN) today announced a breakthrough generation of (More) Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) (NYSE: TXN) today announced a breakthrough generation of ultra-low power MSP430 microcontrollers (MCU), offering the industry's lowest power consumption for devices that can provide up to 25 MHz peak performance, increased Flash and RAM memory and integrated peripherals such as radio frequency (RF), USB, encryption and LCD interfaces. With as low as 160 µA/MHz (microamp per megahertz) active power consumption and 1.5 µA in standby, MSP430F5xx MCUs enable longer battery life and the ability to use smaller batteries for portable applications, or no batteries at all for energy harvesting systems that run off of solar power, vibration energy or human body temperature. For more information, please visit: www.ti.com/5xx.
TI customer, Jim Vogeley, CEO, AdaptivEnergy, explains that their product, the Joule-Thief™ energy harvester, "collects and stores electrical energy from tiny mechanical vibrations and then uses this harvested energy to power a small, low-power MSP430 MCU. The MCU helps enable a compact RF sensor design to implement ambient intelligence that can detect and report critical conditions in factories, automobiles, offices, homes and other environments, all without wiring or batteries."
Increased memory and integrated peripherals like RF, USB, encryption and LCD interfaces allow designers to add functionally needed to advance fields like personal medical, home automation, human interface control, automated meter reading (AMR), portable instrumentation, sensors, consumer electronics and security. Development tools, collateral, third-party support, training and university programs facilitate ease of use and shorten time to market.
To view Multimedia News release go to, http://www.prnewswire.com/mnr/texasinstruments/32692/ (Less)
Applied Structural and Mechan
2009-01-23 - extension: jpg - size: 39 KB
Applied Structural and Mechan
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B0000084
2009-10-31 - extension: rar - size: 13 MB
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