Pc Clock Battery

Jun 29
2009

Pc Clock Battery


Clock Battery 80 mAh for CTX EzBook 800,RTC & Memory Batteries Rechargeable Batteries,NiCd & NiMH Cells Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH) Assemblies Clock Battery 80 mAh for CTX EzBook 800,RTC & Memory Batteries Rechargeable Batteries,NiCd & NiMH Cells Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH) Assemblies
Sale Price: $8.00

Varta Micro BatteryThis is a 2 cell Nickel Metal Hydride rechargeable battery for printed circuit board mounting.This battery has 2 pin polarized termination and solders directly to circuit board.

Clock Battery 15 mAh for SHARP PC8700, PC8800, PC8900 Clock Battery 15 mAh for SHARP PC8700, PC8800, PC8900
Sale Price: $10.00

May Require Technician To InstallThis is a 3 cell Nickel Metal Hydride battery which is specifically designed for Sharp PC8700, PC8800, PC8900 series laptop and notebook computers.Provides back up and clock support while system is down.This ENERGY+ item is assembled in the U.S.A. by American workers.This ENERGY+ item is built with the highest quality standards, safety features and has a 12 month warranty. Assembled in the USA

Clock Battery 30 mAh for NEC Versa 550, 550D,EVEREX StepNote 3500,EVEREX StepNote Plus,SHARP PC3010, PC3020,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 550, 550CD, 550CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 555, 555CD, 555CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 560, 560CD, 560CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 5 Clock Battery 30 mAh for NEC Versa 550, 550D,EVEREX StepNote 3500,EVEREX StepNote Plus,SHARP PC3010, PC3020,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 550, 550CD, 550CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 555, 555CD, 555CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 560, 560CD, 560CDT,TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Extensa 5
Sale Price: $15.00

May Require Technician To InstallThis is a 3 cell Nickel Metal Hydride battery which is specifically designed for NEC Versa 550, 550D, Sharp PC3010, PC3020, Texas Instruments Extensa 550, 555, 560, 565, 570, 575 series laptop and notebook computers.Provides back up and clock support while system is down.This ENERGY+ item is built with the highest quality standards, safety features and has a 12 month warranty. Assembled in the USA

The 8-bit MCUs won't be going away anytime soon (Embedded Systems Design)

Despite claims that the 8-bit MCU will soon be obsolete by 32-bit devices, that may not exactly be the case.

Tricks to Keep Your Device's Battery Going and Going (The Gainesville Sun)

ERIC A. TAUB Smartphone and laptop batteries may seem like cruel masters when they threaten to lose power, but you have more control than you may think.

Tricks to Keep Your Device's Battery Going and Going (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

If you're a recent convert to smartphones, you're probably still discovering all the amazing things that your new BlackBerry, Android phone or iPhone can do. But one thing you most likely found out right away: the more you do, the shorter your phone's battery lasts.

Tricks to Keep Your Device’s Battery Going and Going (New York Times)

Smartphone and laptop batteries may seem like cruel masters when they threaten to lose power, but you have more control than you may think.

The hottest high-tech toys of 2010 (WTOL 11 Toledo)

Let your inner child run wild with these high-tech toys, among the hottest new playthings on display at Toy Fair 2010.

The hottest high-tech toys of 2010 (KMIR 6 Palm Springs)

Being adult geeks, it wasn't hard to be intrigued by the many curious and exotic playthings at the 2010 edition of annual industry confab Toy Fair, which took place last month at New York's Jacob Javits Convention Center.

Panasonic Intros Toughbook C1 Tablet (InformationWeek)

One of the main target markets for the lightweight, rugged tablet PC is healthcare.

Netbook deluge rains new Atoms, too (Linux Devices)

Asus has reportedly used the CeBit show in Germany to launch five netbooks, some of which employ Intel's Atom N455 and N475 CPUs, previously unannounced processors that support DDR3. Meanwhile, Intel added the previous N450, D410, and D510 to its embedded roadmap, touting seven-year availability.

PS3 console errors fixed, leap year bug to blame (CNET)

Reports are still scattered, but after testing our own PS3, it appears the global 8001050F error that left most non-Slim PS3 consoles essentially unplayable seems to be fixed.

The A4 and the A8: secrets of the iPad's brain (Ars Technica)

Most companies, when they go to the enormous expense of designing a complex chip, tell everyone about it. Even a company like Sun or IBM, whose chips are used only in their own computers, unveil the details of their new processors well before products based on those new parts come to market. This is true for game consoles, for SoCs of all flavors, for PC chips, and for most of the rest of the ...

Source: