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togor
09-04-2022, 09:51
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/04/us/politics/russia-missiles-ukraine.html?unlocked_article_code=0IvZmMnQavrbbcK bNHwSMjxEc2GtSrJhpysqhP2svnyzlZHFiDnpRZMX5r-Is-yAyNjLVQ_iAuC2UQz5rj64s1PKBk8iDJRihHXHMwe5uoSPQq7S iUnrA3HwH5QQHUPDvp7BBwQZ76yZ6xXVewldMSmIsmY05HInwn OZYC3gHV4YQP5LSo55Wk10_Bw7emXvk5Rd9vAainuVY9_PJD4E 4kgS_8ZS585OM25SdBGh-2vu0b9j-mmxhNl8Giu9DD1ZDL6idiYfPRVCYI5BpM97BooTxU7_3zMDpm_ gQORqOHYYKGL2fZmly6vMX24Wmha80Rbc1aQIhBOdA2A_fqPDo Urcb_4R&smid=share-url

Looks like the Russians are still using the PC/104 form factor, which came on the scene in the late 80's and was pretty much obsolete (in the Western view) by the early 2000s.

In a past job I had to reverse engineer a desktop projector so that my company (a startup) could use the guts of it in a different application involving wet chemistry and ultraviolet light. That meant tricking the chipset into thinking that it was still happily running in a desktop projector with fans, a color wheel, etc. Had to do that a few times. In my experience the Japanese approach to electronics was more "American" than the German.

I'm assuming somewhere in the DoD, some engineers have already copied the Russian designs, and are building boards with the same chips so that they can functionally evaluate how these systems work. I think that would be a lot of fun, actually.

barretcreek
09-04-2022, 10:05
Have read about Russian diplomats buying up specific consumer goods and toys to get the chips. Vacuum tube avionics which are immune to EMP.

Thanks for the post.

togor
09-04-2022, 10:13
Oh I could see X-boxes and PlayStations going home to Russia in Diplomatic packaging all the time.