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In 1969, BMW introduced the final model in the New Class sedan series, the 2000 tii ('touring international, injected'). This was BMW's first fuel-injected model, featuring Kugelfischer mechanical fuel injection. [1]: 144 The 2000 tii produced 97 kW (130 hp) at 5,800 rpm and 178 N⋅m (131 lb⋅ft) at 4,500 rpm.
(1100/1150) Mobile Athlon 64, Mobile Sempron, Turion 64, Athlon 64 130 800 BI-DIRECTIONAL No Radeon X300 IGP (Xpress 1100, 300 MHz/ Xpress 1150, 400 MHz) Mobile chipset PowerPlay 5.0 support RS482 ATI Radeon Xpress 1100 (ATI Radeon Xpress 200) 2005 Athlon 64, Athlon 64 FX, Athlon 64 X2, Sempron 110 1000 BI-DIRECTIONAL No Radeon X300 IGP, 300 MHz
The Simca 1100 is a series of French compact family cars – mainly C-segment hatchbacks, but also a compact wagon and popular delivery vans – built for over 15 years by French car-maker Simca, from 1967 through 1982/1985. There was even a very early 'hot hatchback', and a family cross-over: the Matra Simca Rancho.
1100 series may refer to: Japanese train types. Hankyu 1100 series EMU operated by Hankyu Corporation between 1956 and 1989; Izuhakone 1100 series EMU operated by the ...
FASTRAND was a magnetic drum mass storage system built by Sperry Rand Corporation (later Sperry Univac) for their UNIVAC 1100 series and 418/490/494 series computers. A FASTRAND subsystem consisted of one or two Control Units and up to eight FASTRAND units.
Model Number Frequency L2-Cache HyperTransport Mult [b] Voltage TDP Release Date Part Number(s) Sempron 2500+ 1400 MHz: 256 KB: 800 MHz: 7x: 1.40 V: 62 W: July 7, 2005
The UNIVAC 1100/90 was introduced in 1982. As with the 1100/80, it was available with up to four processors, and four I/O units. It was the largest, and final, member of the 1100 Series, and was the only system to be liquid-cooled. UNIVAC 1100/80 operations room at University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, New York, 1981
Driver is a video game series consisting of a mixture of action-adventure and driving in open world environments. It is developed by Reflections Interactive (now Ubisoft Reflections), and originally published by GT Interactive, later by Infogrames/Atari and then Ubisoft.