electromagnetic compatibility level of a computer
1Missouri University of Science and Technology Electromagnetic Compatibility Consortium — The Missouri S T EMC (Electromagnetic Compatibility) Consortium is a broad partnership of digital electronics companies committed to funding electromagnetic compatibility research. Research Areas Research is conducted in areas such as Printed… …
2Electromagnetic interference — RIV redirects here. For other uses, see RIV (disambiguation). Electromagnetic interference in analog TV signal Electromagnetic interference (or EMI, also called radio frequency interference or RFI) is disturbance that affects an electrical… …
3computer — computerlike, adj. /keuhm pyooh teuhr/, n. 1. Also called processor. an electronic device designed to accept data, perform prescribed mathematical and logical operations at high speed, and display the results of these operations. Cf. analog… …
4Brain–computer interface — Neuropsychology Topics Brain computer interface …
5Home computer — A home computer was a class of personal computer entering the market in 1977 and becoming common during the 1980s. [ [http://www.homecomputer.de/ Home of the home computer] website] They were marketed to consumers as accessible personal computers …
63D computer graphics software — 3D computer graphics Basics …
7уровень электромагнитной совместимости (средства вычислительной техники) — Уровень внешней помехи с регламентированными значениями параметров, лежащий между нормой на помехоэмиссию и нормой на помехоустойчивость средства вычислительной техники, превышение которого в реальных условиях маловероятно. [ГОСТ 19542 93]… …
8Hearing aid — Behind the ear aid In the ear aid …
9Finite-difference time-domain method — Finite difference time domain (FDTD) is a popular computational electrodynamics modeling technique. It is considered easy to understand and easy to implement in software. Since it is a time domain method, solutions can cover a wide frequency… …
10List of IEC standards — In order to distinguish standards published by the International Electrotechnical Commission numerically from other international standards, their number range was shifted in 1997 by adding 60000. So what used to be called IEC 27 is now… …