Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
An updated version, the Euro PC II introduced in 1989, had 768 KB RAM and a 8087 mathematical coprocessor. [1] [6] Another version with further expansions was called EURO XT. The Euro AT offered a 80286 processor, 1 MB of RAM, and a EGA graphics card. The Euro SX, introduced in 1992, came with a 80386SX processor. [7]
The Austrian euro starter kits were released on 15 December 2001. The general public kit was sold for €14.54 (200.07 ATS, however, rounded to 200 ATS), whereas the business starter kits were available much earlier, on 1 September 2001, and each kit contained €145.50 in Austrian euro coins.
Challenger 2E (export version challenger 2E only, uses Ka500) [4] Merkava Mk. 4; Arjun: Uses the same engine as in EuroPowerPack but with a different semi-automatic Renk RK 304-I transmission [5] K2 Black Panther: Euro power packs (MT883 Ka-501) were used in 100 tanks produced for the first batch.
The X1 is an arc-slider phone with the Windows Mobile 6.1 operating system. It is Sony Ericsson's first mobile phone to feature Windows Mobile. [1] The device also has a Java virtual machine (JBed) and supports Java Platform, Micro Edition [7] that is claimed to have a richer set of features than typically available.
The final production version of the X1 is based on the same platform used in the E90 3 Series, and both have the same 2,760 mm (108.7 in) wheelbase. [10] The platform is also used in the Zinoro 1E , which is an all-electric crossover based on the X1, with a rear-mounted 125 kW (168 hp) electric motor that produces 250 N⋅m (184 lb⋅ft) of torque.
The first laptop with X1 branding was the ThinkPad X1 – the 13-inch sub-compact model, the thinnest and fastest charging business laptop at the time of release in 2011. [5] In contrast with previous 13-inch X series model (X301), it has only one RAM slot and only one storage slot.
Microsoft Entertainment Pack, also known as Windows Entertainment Pack [2] or simply WEP, is a collection of 16-bit casual computer games for Windows. There were four Entertainment Packs released between 1990 and 1992. These games were somewhat unusual for the time, in that they would not run under MS-DOS.
European Standards, [1] [2] sometimes called Euronorm (abbreviated EN, from the German name Europäische Norm, "European Norm"), [3] [4] are technical standards which have been ratified by one of the three European Standards Organizations (ESO): European Committee for Standardization (CEN), European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization (CENELEC), or European Telecommunications ...