InSource Employee Spotlight!  Meet Dunn Dillard, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer for InSource Solutions!

 

Dunn and Carrie DillardDunn Dillard has been with InSource Solutions since its inception.  His journey to InSource began when he went to work for former InSource owner, Mr. Tamim Sahli in 1984.  Dunn assisted Mr. Sahli in acquiring a number of companies which were then merged into Control Corporation of America (CCA) and InSource was spun off from CCA in 1997.  Dunn says that he enjoys working at InSource because “[InSource] is like one of my children and I enjoy seeing it in its adolescence.”

 

 

Dunn was born and raised in Altavista, VA, a town of approximately 3000 residents.  It is located about 2 and a half hours west of Richmond.  Dunn earned his BS in Economics from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.  He currently lives in Chesterfield County with his wife of 32 years, Carrie.  Dunn met his wife in January of 1977 at a college mixer, proposed in July and they were married that same November.  They have two children: Meredith, 26, an actress in New York City and Andrew, 22, a Senior attending Hampden-Sydney College (near Farmville, VA). 

 

Here are some more interesting facts about Dunn.

 

·         Dunn is an instrument rated private pilot and is passionate about flying. His “kids grew up pack the plane for a trip rather than the minivan.”

·          In 1972, Dunn competed in the Olymic trials for rowing but did not make the team.  He then travelled Europe for 8 weeks and attended the Olympic Games in Munich, Germany.

·          If Dunn could choose one person living or deceased to have lunch with, he would pick Benjamin Franklin.  Dunn’s reasoning: “He was the founder of the University of Pennsylvania where I attended and obviously had a few other things he was involved in.”

·          A younger Dunn dreamt of being a physicist when he grew up.

·          Dunn’s favorite saying is “Please learn from other peoples mistakes because you will never live long enough to make them all yourself (although some of us try!)”

 

Dunn looks forward to watching InSource continue to grow.  InSource is proud to count him as one of the founding members of our family!

 

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InSource Employee Spotlight!  Meet Dunn Dillard, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer for InSource Solutions!

 

Dunn and Carrie DillardDunn Dillard has been with InSource Solutions since its inception.  His journey to InSource began when he went to work for former InSource owner, Mr. Tamim Sahli in 1984.  Dunn assisted Mr. Sahli in acquiring a number of companies which were then merged into Control Corporation of America (CCA) and InSource was spun off from CCA in 1997.  Dunn says that he enjoys working at InSource because “[InSource] is like one of my children and I enjoy seeing it in its adolescence.”

 

 

Dunn was born and raised in Altavista, VA, a town of approximately 3000 residents.  It is located about 2 and a half hours west of Richmond.  Dunn earned his BS in Economics from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.  He currently lives in Chesterfield County with his wife of 32 years, Carrie.  Dunn met his wife in January of 1977 at a college mixer, proposed in July and they were married that same November.  They have two children: Meredith, 26, an actress in New York City and Andrew, 22, a Senior attending Hampden-Sydney College (near Farmville, VA). 

 

Here are some more interesting facts about Dunn.

 

·         Dunn is an instrument rated private pilot and is passionate about flying. His “kids grew up pack the plane for a trip rather than the minivan.”

·          In 1972, Dunn competed in the Olymic trials for rowing but did not make the team.  He then travelled Europe for 8 weeks and attended the Olympic Games in Munich, Germany.

·          If Dunn could choose one person living or deceased to have lunch with, he would pick Benjamin Franklin.  Dunn’s reasoning: “He was the founder of the University of Pennsylvania where I attended and obviously had a few other things he was involved in.”

·          A younger Dunn dreamt of being a physicist when he grew up.

·          Dunn’s favorite saying is “Please learn from other peoples mistakes because you will never live long enough to make them all yourself (although some of us try!)”

 

Dunn looks forward to watching InSource continue to grow.  InSource is proud to count him as one of the founding members of our family!

 

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Happy Holidays from InSource Solutions

 

Happy Holidays from InSource Soltuions!

 

InSource Solutions would like to wish you and your family a warm and happy holidays!  We thank you for your support this year and look forward to 2010 with excitement. 

 

We feel that the holidays are a time to share with friends and family.  So that our employees may do just that, we will be closed on the following days.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Friday, December 25, 2009

Friday, January 1, 2010 

 

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Happy Holidays from InSource Solutions

 

Happy Holidays from InSource Soltuions!

 

InSource Solutions would like to wish you and your family a warm and happy holidays!  We thank you for your support this year and look forward to 2010 with excitement. 

 

We feel that the holidays are a time to share with friends and family.  So that our employees may do just that, we will be closed on the following days.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Friday, December 25, 2009

Friday, January 1, 2010 

 

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Wonderware SoutheastInSource Solutions Recognized for Excellence in Technical Support

 

Recently, we told you that InSource Solutions had been recognized for achieving the highest levels of Customer Satisfaction for Technical Support.  The letter below was written to Peter Farrell, InSource Solutions’ Technical Support Manager from Neal Hatton the Wonderware Director of Global Technical Support, Software and Applications.

 

Peter,

At the recent Ops Manage ’09 event we recognized five (5) independent and wholly-owned distributors across the world for achieving high levels of Customer Satisfaction, according to our most recent annual survey of customers.  I would like to congratulate you and the Wonderware Southeast support team on your win!  Your organization had at least 40 respondents from your region indicating satisfaction levels greater than 90% - an excellent achievement.

 

The other winners were Wonderware Mexico, Wonderware Italy, Wonderware Pacwest, and Wonderware Northeast, so out of all the distributors we have worldwide, only a select few hit this high level of customer satisfaction.  Jacqueline Ashby will be making arrangements to ship your award to you.

 

Again, congratulations - it is well-deserved.

Neal Hatton

 

InSource would also like to congratulate our counterparts, thoughout the world, who have also been recognized.

 

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Wonderware SoutheastInSource Solutions Recognized for Excellence in Technical Support

 

Recently, we told you that InSource Solutions had been recognized for achieving the highest levels of Customer Satisfaction for Technical Support.  The letter below was written to Peter Farrell, InSource Solutions’ Technical Support Manager from Neal Hatton the Wonderware Director of Global Technical Support, Software and Applications.

 

Peter,

At the recent Ops Manage ’09 event we recognized five (5) independent and wholly-owned distributors across the world for achieving high levels of Customer Satisfaction, according to our most recent annual survey of customers.  I would like to congratulate you and the Wonderware Southeast support team on your win!  Your organization had at least 40 respondents from your region indicating satisfaction levels greater than 90% - an excellent achievement.

 

The other winners were Wonderware Mexico, Wonderware Italy, Wonderware Pacwest, and Wonderware Northeast, so out of all the distributors we have worldwide, only a select few hit this high level of customer satisfaction.  Jacqueline Ashby will be making arrangements to ship your award to you.

 

Again, congratulations - it is well-deserved.

Neal Hatton

 

InSource would also like to congratulate our counterparts, thoughout the world, who have also been recognized.

 

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Arista CorporationArista Corporation announces the new BoxPC-238D

 

The BoxPC-238D is Arista Corporations' newest next generation fanless industrial computer. This model combines Arista's most popular features of fanless units with industry leading design elements and provides high horsepower industrial computing in a thermally controlled system.

The BoxPC-238D is available with dual 1394B firewire or USB ports.  This feature supports the machine vision applications. The other key features include a dual swappable 2.5" SSD/HDD drive bays, PCI expansion slots, dual Gigabit Ethernet ports, dual video outputs (DVI VGA), quad USB 2.0 ports and quad COM ports. The compactly designed chassis accommodates all these features and enables additional cards and hardware to expand the PCs memory or upgrade its performance.

Arista BoxPC-238DThe BoxPC-238D is compliant with IP50 standard.  It protects the system against dust and is designed to be used in harsh environments. The robust aluminum housings ensure reliable operation at temperatures ranging from 00
C to 500 C (320 F to 1220 F) in up to 95% non-condensing relative humidity.  This model is an ideal solution for extreme industrial environments which experience constant exposure to dust. The BoxPC-238D is wall mountable and can be flexibly integrated into a number of industrial applications, such as Plant Floor Machine Vision Applications, Control Room in Plant Floors, Electric Power Services, and so on. The unit comes standard with Windows XP Pro and can be custom configured to suit the precise industrial applications.

The BoxPC-238D has incorporated thin client technology into its design.  Arista offers ThinManager Ready Thin Client with up to 5 VGA connectors. When configured with MultiMonitor, these clients support session spanning and MultiSession technologies.   ACP's software allows spanning a single session across multiple screens for effective visualization or displaying a different session on each individual screen, or presenting a combination of the two.  BoxPC-238D extends the reach of plant floor automation from production lines to control point and control room.

 

The BoxPC-238D packs powerful Intel® Core 2 Duo processor, dual field removable HDDs, dual 1394B firewire and four USB   ports in a fanless compact IP50 rating chassis—an ideal solution for machine vision on the plant floor or in control rooms.  Dual 1394B firewire and four USB ports provide interface to most industrial cameras.

 

To learn more about this or other Arista products, click here.

 

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Arista CorporationArista Corporation announces the new BoxPC-238D

 

The BoxPC-238D is Arista Corporations' newest next generation fanless industrial computer. This model combines Arista's most popular features of fanless units with industry leading design elements and provides high horsepower industrial computing in a thermally controlled system.

The BoxPC-238D is available with dual 1394B firewire or USB ports.  This feature supports the machine vision applications. The other key features include a dual swappable 2.5" SSD/HDD drive bays, PCI expansion slots, dual Gigabit Ethernet ports, dual video outputs (DVI VGA), quad USB 2.0 ports and quad COM ports. The compactly designed chassis accommodates all these features and enables additional cards and hardware to expand the PCs memory or upgrade its performance.

Arista BoxPC-238DThe BoxPC-238D is compliant with IP50 standard.  It protects the system against dust and is designed to be used in harsh environments. The robust aluminum housings ensure reliable operation at temperatures ranging from 00
C to 500 C (320 F to 1220 F) in up to 95% non-condensing relative humidity.  This model is an ideal solution for extreme industrial environments which experience constant exposure to dust. The BoxPC-238D is wall mountable and can be flexibly integrated into a number of industrial applications, such as Plant Floor Machine Vision Applications, Control Room in Plant Floors, Electric Power Services, and so on. The unit comes standard with Windows XP Pro and can be custom configured to suit the precise industrial applications.

The BoxPC-238D has incorporated thin client technology into its design.  Arista offers ThinManager Ready Thin Client with up to 5 VGA connectors. When configured with MultiMonitor, these clients support session spanning and MultiSession technologies.   ACP's software allows spanning a single session across multiple screens for effective visualization or displaying a different session on each individual screen, or presenting a combination of the two.  BoxPC-238D extends the reach of plant floor automation from production lines to control point and control room.

 

The BoxPC-238D packs powerful Intel® Core 2 Duo processor, dual field removable HDDs, dual 1394B firewire and four USB   ports in a fanless compact IP50 rating chassis—an ideal solution for machine vision on the plant floor or in control rooms.  Dual 1394B firewire and four USB ports provide interface to most industrial cameras.

 

To learn more about this or other Arista products, click here.

 

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Invensys WonderwareWonderware Enterprise Integrator 3.5 Announced

 

Invensys Operations Management has unveiled version 3.5 of its Wonderware Enterprise Integrator software solution.  The newest version enables secure integration of Wonderware manufacturing execution software (MES) applications, with enterprise resource planning, product lifecycle management, supply chain management,  laboratory information management and other enterprise systems. The Wonderware Enterprise Integrator 3.5 solution eliminates high maintenance integration scenarios by allowing consistent operations-to-enterprise integration.

 

Version 3.5 represents the latest in the evolution of enterprise integration. The software offers out-of-the-box, site-to-enterprise integration services for Wonderware MES.  This includes complete message history, secured delivery and store forward. Technology support for industry standards such as S95 and B2MML, as well as for service-oriented architectures, helps further reduce the total cost of ownership of integration and IT landscapes.

 

Easy-to-use configuration, administration and status views offer fast, maintainable and more cost-effective enterprise integration compared to non-standard or custom, one-off software-based integration solutions. The product also allows customers to achieve business continuity in the case of ERP or business system unavailability and the ability to maintain data consistency by a menu-driven, web-based user interface.

 

Source: Wonderware.com

 

For more information or to contact your local Wonderware Southeast Account Executive, click here.

 

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Invensys WonderwareWonderware Enterprise Integrator 3.5 Announced

 

Invensys Operations Management has unveiled version 3.5 of its Wonderware Enterprise Integrator software solution.  The newest version enables secure integration of Wonderware manufacturing execution software (MES) applications, with enterprise resource planning, product lifecycle management, supply chain management,  laboratory information management and other enterprise systems. The Wonderware Enterprise Integrator 3.5 solution eliminates high maintenance integration scenarios by allowing consistent operations-to-enterprise integration.

 

Version 3.5 represents the latest in the evolution of enterprise integration. The software offers out-of-the-box, site-to-enterprise integration services for Wonderware MES.  This includes complete message history, secured delivery and store forward. Technology support for industry standards such as S95 and B2MML, as well as for service-oriented architectures, helps further reduce the total cost of ownership of integration and IT landscapes.

 

Easy-to-use configuration, administration and status views offer fast, maintainable and more cost-effective enterprise integration compared to non-standard or custom, one-off software-based integration solutions. The product also allows customers to achieve business continuity in the case of ERP or business system unavailability and the ability to maintain data consistency by a menu-driven, web-based user interface.

 

Source: Wonderware.com

 

For more information or to contact your local Wonderware Southeast Account Executive, click here.

 

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ACP ThinManager Platform 4 Shipping December 21

 

ACP announces plans to begin shipping Platform 4 on December 21 (Comprehensive Support customers can expect their shipments in January 2010). This new Platform includes the latest ThinManager software and features, including IP Camera support.  Platform 4 will also include many of our modules, such as Instant Failover, MultiSession and SmartSession at no additional charge!

 

For more information please contact Comprehensive Support Team Leader, Tammy Paulette (866.204.6184 or tpaulette@insourcess.com).

 

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ACP ThinManager Platform 4 Shipping December 21

 

ACP announces plans to begin shipping Platform 4 on December 21 (Comprehensive Support customers can expect their shipments in January 2010). This new Platform includes the latest ThinManager software and features, including IP Camera support.  Platform 4 will also include many of our modules, such as Instant Failover, MultiSession and SmartSession at no additional charge!

 

For more information please contact Comprehensive Support Team Leader, Tammy Paulette (866.204.6184 or tpaulette@insourcess.com).

 

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Lesia's Q&A Corner

Ask the Infrastructure Experts!  Lesia's Q & A Corner

The Chatter Around DVI

 

DVI (Digital Video Interface) seems to be the new popular option in digital devices such as projectors and LCD displays.  I have noticed with this popularity DVI has become the question of the day regarding video connections on the plant floor.   As we enter, the digital world we must become more educated with new technology such as DVI and learn what it has to offer.

 

VGA (Video Graphic Array) which was brought to us by IBM in 1981 offered a 16-color display with a maximum resolution of 640 (pixel) by 480 (pixel) but also included lower resolutions.  By 1991, high-resolution VGA-compatible adapters had come to the market.  These early chips used a VGA programming model but had more memory and could support resolutions such as 800x600 or 1024x768 in 16 colors, or 640x480 in 256 colors. This became the standard and is still today but VGA seems to be going to the way side little by little in the commercial markets now that the media and PC industries are pushing for the digital age.  DVI's ability to improve image quality and transfer rates does make it the best successor to analog.

 

There still is the question of what is DVI and what does it offer?  DVI is a specification created by the Digital Display Working Group to accommodate analog and digital interfaces with a single connector. Due to the lack of standardization for digital interfacing DVI was born. 

 

VGA DVI PortsDVI is designed to carry uncompressed digital video data to a display. It is partially compatible with the High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) standard in digital mode (DVI-D), and VGA in analog mode (DVI-A).   The DVI interface uses a digital protocol in which the desired illumination of pixels is transmitted as binary data. When the display is operating at its native resolution, it will read each number and apply that brightness to the appropriate pixel. In this way, each pixel in the output buffer of the source device corresponds directly to one pixel in the display device, whereas with an analog signal the appearance of each pixel may be diminished by its adjacent pixels as well as by electrical noise and other forms of analog distortion.

 

DVI uses an interface known as Transition Minimized Differential Signaling (TMDS).  A single DVI link consists of four twisted pairs of wires RGB and 1 clock to transmit 24 bits per pixel. The timing of the signal almost exactly matches that of an analog video signal. The picture is transmitted line by line with blanking intervals between each line and each frame, and without packetization. No compression is used and there is no support for only transmitting changed parts of the image. This means that the whole frame is constantly re-transmitted.

 

With a single DVI link, the largest resolution possible at 60 Hz is 2.75 megapixels (including blanking interval) this gives us our standard 4:3 ratio (1915x1436 pixels), 5:4 ratio (1854 x 1483 pixels) or widescreen 8:5 ratio (2098 x 1311). The DVI connector therefore has provision for a second link, containing another set of RGB twisted pairs. When more bandwidth is required than is possible with a single link, the second link is enabled, and alternate pixels may be transmitted on each, allowing resolutions up to 4 megapixels at 60 Hz. The DVI specification mandates a fixed single link maximum pixel clock frequency of 165 MHz, where all display modes that require less than this must use single link mode, and all those that require more must switch to dual link mode. When both links are in use, the pixel rate on each may exceed 165 MHz. The second link can also be used when more than 24 bits per pixel is required, in which case it carries the least significant bits. The data pairs carry binary data at ten times the pixel clock reference frequency, for a maximum data rate of 1.65 Gbit/s x 3 data pairs for a single DVI link.

 

Like modern analog VGA connectors, the DVI connector includes pins for the display data channel (DDC). DDC2 (a newer version of DDC) allows the graphics adapter to read the monitor’s extended display identification data (EDID). If a display supports both analog and digital signals in one input, each input can host a distinct EDID. If both receivers are active, analog EDID is used. 

Now that that we have a better understand of DVI, you need to realize that in Industrial Manufacturing VGA remains the standard but when we start to mix consumer displays with your industrial application such as ACP thin clients and terminal services we run into the VGA versus DVI dilemma.  Despite its age, VGA still offers full HD resolution of 1920x1080. In a manufacturing environment, there is no inherent advantage to using DVI.  VGA still offers the quality display image you need for your application.  When shopping for consumer display you just need to make sure they have VGA I/O since a lot of the larger LCD’s only have DVI.  If you find yourself in this issue, there is the option of a VGA to DVI converter as well. 

 

In addition, Advantech currently offers a thin client with DVI and Arista is working on a new thin client with DVI for 2010; therefore, we should have less issue in the New Year around DVI and how it works.

 

For more information on VGA, DVI, thin clients and/or display options for your industrial application please contact Lesia Bell at 443.683.8061 or lbell@insourcess.com

 

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Lesia's Q&A Corner

Ask the Infrastructure Experts!  Lesia's Q & A Corner

The Chatter Around DVI

 

DVI (Digital Video Interface) seems to be the new popular option in digital devices such as projectors and LCD displays.  I have noticed with this popularity DVI has become the question of the day regarding video connections on the plant floor.   As we enter, the digital world we must become more educated with new technology such as DVI and learn what it has to offer.

 

VGA (Video Graphic Array) which was brought to us by IBM in 1981 offered a 16-color display with a maximum resolution of 640 (pixel) by 480 (pixel) but also included lower resolutions.  By 1991, high-resolution VGA-compatible adapters had come to the market.  These early chips used a VGA programming model but had more memory and could support resolutions such as 800x600 or 1024x768 in 16 colors, or 640x480 in 256 colors. This became the standard and is still today but VGA seems to be going to the way side little by little in the commercial markets now that the media and PC industries are pushing for the digital age.  DVI's ability to improve image quality and transfer rates does make it the best successor to analog.

 

There still is the question of what is DVI and what does it offer?  DVI is a specification created by the Digital Display Working Group to accommodate analog and digital interfaces with a single connector. Due to the lack of standardization for digital interfacing DVI was born. 

 

VGA DVI PortsDVI is designed to carry uncompressed digital video data to a display. It is partially compatible with the High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) standard in digital mode (DVI-D), and VGA in analog mode (DVI-A).   The DVI interface uses a digital protocol in which the desired illumination of pixels is transmitted as binary data. When the display is operating at its native resolution, it will read each number and apply that brightness to the appropriate pixel. In this way, each pixel in the output buffer of the source device corresponds directly to one pixel in the display device, whereas with an analog signal the appearance of each pixel may be diminished by its adjacent pixels as well as by electrical noise and other forms of analog distortion.

 

DVI uses an interface known as Transition Minimized Differential Signaling (TMDS).  A single DVI link consists of four twisted pairs of wires RGB and 1 clock to transmit 24 bits per pixel. The timing of the signal almost exactly matches that of an analog video signal. The picture is transmitted line by line with blanking intervals between each line and each frame, and without packetization. No compression is used and there is no support for only transmitting changed parts of the image. This means that the whole frame is constantly re-transmitted.

 

With a single DVI link, the largest resolution possible at 60 Hz is 2.75 megapixels (including blanking interval) this gives us our standard 4:3 ratio (1915x1436 pixels), 5:4 ratio (1854 x 1483 pixels) or widescreen 8:5 ratio (2098 x 1311). The DVI connector therefore has provision for a second link, containing another set of RGB twisted pairs. When more bandwidth is required than is possible with a single link, the second link is enabled, and alternate pixels may be transmitted on each, allowing resolutions up to 4 megapixels at 60 Hz. The DVI specification mandates a fixed single link maximum pixel clock frequency of 165 MHz, where all display modes that require less than this must use single link mode, and all those that require more must switch to dual link mode. When both links are in use, the pixel rate on each may exceed 165 MHz. The second link can also be used when more than 24 bits per pixel is required, in which case it carries the least significant bits. The data pairs carry binary data at ten times the pixel clock reference frequency, for a maximum data rate of 1.65 Gbit/s x 3 data pairs for a single DVI link.

 

Like modern analog VGA connectors, the DVI connector includes pins for the display data channel (DDC). DDC2 (a newer version of DDC) allows the graphics adapter to read the monitor’s extended display identification data (EDID). If a display supports both analog and digital signals in one input, each input can host a distinct EDID. If both receivers are active, analog EDID is used. 

Now that that we have a better understand of DVI, you need to realize that in Industrial Manufacturing VGA remains the standard but when we start to mix consumer displays with your industrial application such as ACP thin clients and terminal services we run into the VGA versus DVI dilemma.  Despite its age, VGA still offers full HD resolution of 1920x1080. In a manufacturing environment, there is no inherent advantage to using DVI.  VGA still offers the quality display image you need for your application.  When shopping for consumer display you just need to make sure they have VGA I/O since a lot of the larger LCD’s only have DVI.  If you find yourself in this issue, there is the option of a VGA to DVI converter as well. 

 

In addition, Advantech currently offers a thin client with DVI and Arista is working on a new thin client with DVI for 2010; therefore, we should have less issue in the New Year around DVI and how it works.

 

For more information on VGA, DVI, thin clients and/or display options for your industrial application please contact Lesia Bell at 443.683.8061 or lbell@insourcess.com

 

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AdvantechAdvantech Announces Newest Stainless, Fanless Industrial Panel PC

 

The Industrial Automation Group of Advantech introduces the IPPC-8151S, a 15” XGA TFT LCD fanless Industrial Panel PC with an Intel Celeron® M 1GHz CPU.  The IPPC-8151S has  a special tapered & food safe rubber seal between the bezel and the chemical resistant touch screen and, optionally, a fully sealed 316L stainless steel enclosure.  These features satisfy the standards required in food processing, clinical, chemical or pharmaceutical applications. When modified with the fully sealed enclosure, it is completely protected against water damage, achieving a NEMA4 (IP66) grade of protection.

The IP66 rating guarantees waterproof and dustproof protection, ensuring reliable operation in SS IPPCany hazardous environment. The standard model supports IP66 grade protection on the front panel only, while an optional stainless steel enclosure kit and IP66 I/O module are available to support a fully enclosed IP66 protection for all sides including all I/O ports.

 

Stainless steel chassis’ are a great fit for many industrial applications with their ability to minimize contamination and maintain strict hygienic requirements. 316L stainless steel is more resistant to corrosion than 304 and the IP66 rating  provides waterproof protection.The IPPC-8151S is  easy to clean or disinfect even with high pressure water. The dust­proof capabilities make it exceptionally suitable for applications in hazardous environments. Additionally, the specially designed touch screen is resistant to chemical, detergent and disinfectant damage.

 

The IPPC-8151S is equipped with a bright, sharp display. The embedded Intel Celeron M 1GHz, 1MB L2 cache and 1GB DDR2 memory satisfy most application computing needs. The fanless design extends operational life with enhanced anti-shock and anti-vibration properties suitable for harsh environments. With one CompactFlash slot, one PCI expansion, and one SATA HDD, the IPPC-8151S provides flexibility and meets high capacity demands.

 

For more information or to order Advantech products, click here.

 

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AdvantechAdvantech Announces Newest Stainless, Fanless Industrial Panel PC

 

The Industrial Automation Group of Advantech introduces the IPPC-8151S, a 15” XGA TFT LCD fanless Industrial Panel PC with an Intel Celeron® M 1GHz CPU.  The IPPC-8151S has  a special tapered & food safe rubber seal between the bezel and the chemical resistant touch screen and, optionally, a fully sealed 316L stainless steel enclosure.  These features satisfy the standards required in food processing, clinical, chemical or pharmaceutical applications. When modified with the fully sealed enclosure, it is completely protected against water damage, achieving a NEMA4 (IP66) grade of protection.

The IP66 rating guarantees waterproof and dustproof protection, ensuring reliable operation in SS IPPCany hazardous environment. The standard model supports IP66 grade protection on the front panel only, while an optional stainless steel enclosure kit and IP66 I/O module are available to support a fully enclosed IP66 protection for all sides including all I/O ports.

 

Stainless steel chassis’ are a great fit for many industrial applications with their ability to minimize contamination and maintain strict hygienic requirements. 316L stainless steel is more resistant to corrosion than 304 and the IP66 rating  provides waterproof protection.The IPPC-8151S is  easy to clean or disinfect even with high pressure water. The dust­proof capabilities make it exceptionally suitable for applications in hazardous environments. Additionally, the specially designed touch screen is resistant to chemical, detergent and disinfectant damage.

 

The IPPC-8151S is equipped with a bright, sharp display. The embedded Intel Celeron M 1GHz, 1MB L2 cache and 1GB DDR2 memory satisfy most application computing needs. The fanless design extends operational life with enhanced anti-shock and anti-vibration properties suitable for harsh environments. With one CompactFlash slot, one PCI expansion, and one SATA HDD, the IPPC-8151S provides flexibility and meets high capacity demands.

 

For more information or to order Advantech products, click here.

 

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BookAcronym of the Month

 

Every issue we feature an Acronym of the month, that you may or may not already know, related to industry/business topics and general interest/just for fun topics.  If you have a suggestion for an appropriate Acronym, please email Katie Schauer at kschauer@insourcess.com.

 

Business Related

OEM: Oracle Enterprise Management

 

Just for Fun!

TTFN: Ta ta for now! 

 

 

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BookAcronym of the Month

 

Every issue we feature an Acronym of the month, that you may or may not already know, related to industry/business topics and general interest/just for fun topics.  If you have a suggestion for an appropriate Acronym, please email Katie Schauer at kschauer@insourcess.com.

 

Business Related

OEM: Oracle Enterprise Management

 

Just for Fun!

TTFN: Ta ta for now! 

 

 

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Wonderware LogoNew Wonderware Tech Notes

 

679  IntelaTrac 3.2.3 (Hotfix 10) Release Notes and Installation Instructions

678  Wonderware IntelaTrac Trends using Wonderware Historian Data

677  IntelaTrac 3.2.3 (Hotfix 9) Release Notes and Installation Instructions

675  How to Restore a Galaxy if the Galaxy Repository is Lost

674  Monitoring an Engine and Providing Problem Notification

673  Troubleshooting Application Server: How to Enable MiniDump on AOS Servers

 

 

For more alerts and notes visit the Wonderware website at http://www.wonderware.com/support/web/secure/selfsupport/estechalerts.asp

 

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Wonderware LogoNew Wonderware Tech Notes

 

679  IntelaTrac 3.2.3 (Hotfix 10) Release Notes and Installation Instructions

678  Wonderware IntelaTrac Trends using Wonderware Historian Data

677  IntelaTrac 3.2.3 (Hotfix 9) Release Notes and Installation Instructions

675  How to Restore a Galaxy if the Galaxy Repository is Lost

674  Monitoring an Engine and Providing Problem Notification

673  Troubleshooting Application Server: How to Enable MiniDump on AOS Servers

 

 

For more alerts and notes visit the Wonderware website at http://www.wonderware.com/support/web/secure/selfsupport/estechalerts.asp

 

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Upcoming InSource Solutions Webinars

 

Date                         Time                    Topic

 

January 8, 2010        9 AM                     Wonderware Corporate Energy Management

January 8, 2010        11 AM                   System Platform Part 3 of 4: Historian/Analytic Services

January 8, 2010        1 PM                      CustomerFirst Update

January 8, 2010        3 PM                      Computing on the Plant Floor

 

Click here to view the complete webinar schedule

 

Click here to register for a webinar

 

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Upcoming InSource Solutions Webinars

 

Date                         Time                    Topic

 

January 8, 2010        9 AM                     Wonderware Corporate Energy Management

January 8, 2010        11 AM                   System Platform Part 3 of 4: Historian/Analytic Services

January 8, 2010        1 PM                      CustomerFirst Update

January 8, 2010        3 PM                      Computing on the Plant Floor

 

Click here to view the complete webinar schedule

 

Click here to register for a webinar

 

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