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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A Design Methodology for Implementation of Serial Peripheral Interface Using VHDL

Kurapati, Jyothsna 17 July 2005 (has links)
In this thesis, an approach is proposed for the design and implementation of a serial peripheral interface using Complex Programmable Logic Devices, (CPLD's). The focus of this research was to develop an effective Serial Peripheral Interface. The Serial Peripheral Interface, (SPI), created by Motorola is also known as Microwire, which is a trademark of National Semiconductor. The SPI is a full-duplex, synchronous, serial data link that enables communication between a host processor and peripherals. The Serial peripheral interface can be programmed in software or built strictly in hardware inside a microcontroller. However, Complex programmable logic devices offer a quicker and more customizable solution. This research investigated the Serial peripheral interface with respect to its implementation in a CPLD and the use of the Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description language, (VHDL).
2

A prototypical Computer Museum

Ryder, Eric Otto 01 January 2001 (has links)
Civilization seems barely able to keep up with the new information technology. Therefore, I propose a place where the technologies of the future may be interacted with like the comfortable knowledge of the past. I propose a place where technology may be interacted on as in the realm of the past with the doors of the future ahead. The Museum of Science and Industry, where the grasp of our technological history is displayed, would be an ideal site for the creation of a Prototypical Computer Museum. With its close proximity to the University of South Florida, resources and participants would be abundant. The Prototypical Computer Museum will be a place where the education and explanation of new technology is continued. This would also provide an arena for the development and interaction of state-of-the-art computer technologies and will be considered the cultural centerpiece for the new millenium. Activities at this Multi-Media Center range from basic explanations of initial computer inventions to on-site research and development of future technologies. Permanent and traveling exhibitions would attract and expose people of all ages to the new waves of technological devices and inventions that engulf our daily activities. This simple ideal is blanketed with a variety of complicated sociological issues that will be addressed throughout the thesis research and its fruition. The fundamental paradox is the borderlessness of the technology, which is continually at odds with the structures housing and exhibiting such technologies. Another major concern is the development of virtual reality and its dwindling necessity for the development of the architecture that contains it. This is a technology that is accessible anywhere but located nowhere. As Otto Riewoldt states, "By reacting to the digital dematerialization of the world, architecture becomes increasingly individualized."1 In the words of American architectural critic Herbert Muschamp, "subjectivity takes command. Like surrealists these architects seem determined to blur the border between waking reality and the dream state."

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