Industrial-grade embedded computers based on Intel Atom microprocessor introduced by Advantech

June 5, 2011
NEW TAIPEI CITY, Taiwan, 5 June 2011. Advantech Industrial Automation Group (IAG) in New Taipei City, Taiwan, is introducing the UNO-2174A and UNO-2178A Intel Atom-based embedded automation computers for applications in a wide range of environments, such as communication protocol converting, machine automation, and factory automation. The embedded computing products offer low-power-consumption dual-core 1.67 GHz Atom microprocessors and 2GB DDR2 RAM for performance compatibility with the Windows 7 software operating system.

NEW TAIPEI CITY, Taiwan, 5 June 2011. Advantech Industrial Automation Group (IAG) in New Taipei City, Taiwan, is introducing the UNO-2174A and UNO-2178A Intel Atom-based embedded computers for applications in a wide range of environments, such as communication protocol converting, machine automation, and factory automation.The embedded computing products offer low-power-consumption dual-core 1.67 GHz Atom microprocessors and 2GB DDR2 RAM for performance compatibility with the Windows 7 software operating system. They are Energy Star certified, resist dust ingress per IP40, and operate in temperatures -10 to 70 degrees Celsius.

The UNO-2174A & 2178A come with 5.1 HD channel Audio, two RS-232/485 serial ports, two RS-232/422/485 serial ports, two Gigabit Ethernet ports, six USB 2.0 ports, one printer port, and four RS-232/485 serial ports via an additional cable.

The computers also come with two full-sized Mini PCI Express and one SIM card slot. Optional plug-in PC/104+ and PCI-104 daughterboards are also available.The UNO-2174A/2178A also support embedded operating systems. Advantech DiagAnywhere Agent is also available.

For more information contact Advantech Industrial Automation online at www.advantech.com/eautomation.

About the Author

John Keller | Editor

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

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