Codec '97) is Intel Corporation's Audio "Codec" standard developed by the Intel Architecture Labs in 1997 and used mainly in motherboards, modems, and sound cards.
2.2.2.3Power connector (CN5)
PCM-9588 can support both ATX and AT power supply and it can use different power cable make the choice.
1.ATX power supply: you need to use ATX power cable (PN: 1700001112 WIRE ATX-20P(M)/12P(F)+3P-2.0MM 15CM)
ATX: 5 V STB, +5 V ±5%, ±12 V ±5%, external 12 V option for LCD Inverter, PCI
&PCI-104 Plus.
2.AT power supply: you need to use AT power cable (PN: 1700006196 AT Power Cable 12P/Big 4P*2 10cm)
AT: 5 V only to boot up, external 12 V option for LCD Inverter, PCI & PC/104 Plus.
2.2.2.4Inverter connector (CN6)
PCM-9588 can provide +5V and +12V and signal to LCD inverter board via CN6.
2.2.2.5VGA connector (CN8)
The DB15-pin female connector is provided for video monitors.
2.2.2.6LVDS connector (CN9)
Low-voltage differential signaling, or LVDS, is an electrical signaling system that can run at very high speeds over inexpensive twisted-pair copper cables. LVDS is a dif- ferential signaling system, which means that it transmits two different voltages which are compared at the receiver. LVDS uses this difference in voltage between the two wires to encode the information.
CN9 is LVDS (Low Voltage Differential Signal) connector. You can connect to 48bit LVDS LCD panel via CN9.
2.2.2.7TTL Panel Connector (CN10, CN11)
PCM-9588 support TTL LCD and CN10 is TTL Panel High bits and CN11 is Low bits Connectors.
2.2.2.8LAN Connector (CN12)
For the LAN port, it equipped with 1 high performance ethernet port which are fully compliant with IEEE 802.3u 100Base-T. It is supported by all major network operating systems. For customer requirement, PCM-9588 also has giga LAN option and it is also fully compliant with IEEE 802.3ab 1000Base-T.
2.2.2.9HDD LED and POWER LED connector (CN13)
CN13 is a front panel connector to indicate power and HDD status.
2.2.2.10LPT/FDD Connector (CN15)
PCM-9588 can support LPT or Floppy via CN15. LPT (Line Print Terminal) is the orig- inal, yet still common, name of the parallel port interface on IBM PC-compatible com- puters. It was designed to operate a text printer that used IBM's 8-bit extended ASCII character set.