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Digital I/O card targets gaming devices

Nov 2, 2006 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 1 views


Taiwanese board-vendor Acrosser is shipping a 96-bit PCI-bus I/O card with discrete I/O, on-board SRAM, and a host of built-in security features. The AR-B2002 supports Linux, and targets casino gaming machines and industrial control applications.


AR-ES0891
(Click to enlarge)

Acrosser describes the AR-B2002 as an “all-in-one” gaming I/O control card that can be used to interface with “several” gaming peripherals. The card is especially well suited for use with Acrosser's Linux-friendly, Pentium M-powered AR-ES0891 system (pictured at right), the company says.

Touted features aimed at gaming control include 96-bit digital I/O, a timer, battery-backed SRAM, an intrusion logger, “software security,” and a real-time clock.

Additional touted features include:

  • 32-bit 33MHz 5V/3.3V PCI bus
  • 88 channels programmable digital I/O
  • Interrupt on input change-of-state
  • 4 x 16-bit programmer timer
  • 512K bytes battery backup SRAM
  • 8 channels, 16 events Intrusion logger
  • 8-bit DIP switch read back

Availability

The AR-B2002 appears to be available now, along with drivers for Linux and Windows XP. Pricing was not disclosed.


 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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