M
msg
Guest
Greetings,
I would appreciate any information on the 'Modular' brand
AX series tiny pc or thin client; photos of the insides
and outsides of an MC/AX-233-64 are here:
http://www.cybertheque.org/tmp/modular
This box is about six inches by nine inches by three inches
deep; the PC104 board has a P-233 CPU and 64MB ram, DEC
ethernet, parallel and two serial ports, kbd, mouse,
3com Bootware, floppy, 4-IDE and a few unknown interface
connectors. There are a great many jumper blocks which
need to be documented. I could not find any data on the
'Net or in my 4th QTR 1999 Microhouse databases. The
board was made in 1998 and has no part number data other
than 'Secura REV:C' 'Made in Taiwan'. I did not find any
references to a Taiwanese Mfg. called Secura in my limited
searching, and any pages for 'Modular' at 60 Codman Hill
Road in Boxborough, MA, using the domain name 'mod.com'
at the Wayback Machine have been blocked by a robots.txt
file on the current domain-name parker's website.
Tiny PCs like this one are invaluable in the lab for running
data acquisition, signal generation and experiment control
as well as older development kit software for mature parts,
so finding the jumper data is worth pursuing.
All help appreciated!
Michael
I would appreciate any information on the 'Modular' brand
AX series tiny pc or thin client; photos of the insides
and outsides of an MC/AX-233-64 are here:
http://www.cybertheque.org/tmp/modular
This box is about six inches by nine inches by three inches
deep; the PC104 board has a P-233 CPU and 64MB ram, DEC
ethernet, parallel and two serial ports, kbd, mouse,
3com Bootware, floppy, 4-IDE and a few unknown interface
connectors. There are a great many jumper blocks which
need to be documented. I could not find any data on the
'Net or in my 4th QTR 1999 Microhouse databases. The
board was made in 1998 and has no part number data other
than 'Secura REV:C' 'Made in Taiwan'. I did not find any
references to a Taiwanese Mfg. called Secura in my limited
searching, and any pages for 'Modular' at 60 Codman Hill
Road in Boxborough, MA, using the domain name 'mod.com'
at the Wayback Machine have been blocked by a robots.txt
file on the current domain-name parker's website.
Tiny PCs like this one are invaluable in the lab for running
data acquisition, signal generation and experiment control
as well as older development kit software for mature parts,
so finding the jumper data is worth pursuing.
All help appreciated!
Michael