Saturday, December 18, 2010
Open Source OS in Handheld embedded devices
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 5.7MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by MUHAMMAD SHAFEEQUE K A
Engineering Graphics Lecture Class In 'Malayalam' DVD 2 of 4
Original DVD Disk : 4.7 GB Encoded to 960MB by Me
You can view a sample of the DVD content from below
Note that the sample is a low quality version but the download links are for high quality DVD Rip
Download Links
(All the links provided here are high quality direct download resumable links.No waiting time and no speed limits etc like Rapidshare or Hotfile. Use Internet Download Manager (IDM) or Flash Get or Downlad Accelerator Premium(DAP) to speed up download.
Download
When you click download you will be redirected to another page in which you can download the 7 parts of the dvd 2.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Lithography And Other Patterning Techniques For Future Electronics
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 3.1MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by ANAND NEELAKANTAN G
Design Of 2D Filters Using A Parallel Processor Architecture
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 1.2MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by AKHIL K S
Engineering Graphics Lecture Class In 'Malayalam' DVD 1 of 4
Original DVD Disk : 4.7 GB Encoded to 1.05 Gb by Me
You can view a sample of the DVD content from below
Note that the sample is a low quality version but the download links are for high quality DVD Rip
Download Links
(All the links provided here are high quality direct download resumable links.No waiting time and no speed limits etc like Rapidshare or Hotfile. Use Internet Download Manager (IDM) or Flash Get or Downlad Accelerator Premium(DAP) to speed up download.
(note:There is some problem with the name at the download page . Instead of 105 it is 501 there. It is just an error in the name. Don't be confused wid that)
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_1
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_2
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_3
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_4
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_5
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_6
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_7
http://bit.ly/105dvd1_8
How To Join Parts Of The Rar File?
As u may notice after downloading u will get different rar files named as YYY.part1.rar , YYY.part2.rar etc(Say) . So how to combine them into a single file ? It is very easy . You need winrar or 7 Zip. You need to place all the parts in same directory and right click on one of them and chose Extract To YYY.(if the splitted parts are YYY.part1.rar YYY.part2.rar etc. YYY is just a representation here actually it will be EC 501 DVD 1).Just select it and then all the parts will be extracted.
RSVP Protocol
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 4.5MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by REMYASREE M K
Real Time Image Processing Applied To Traffic Queue Detection Algorithm
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 4.5MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by NITHIN RAJ
E Beam Hard Disk Drive Using Grated Carbon Nanotube
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 2.5MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by ALBIN JACOB
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Quantum computation
A quantum computer is a device for computation that makes direct use of quantum mechanical phenomena, such as superposition and entanglement, to perform operations on data. Quantum computers are different from traditional computers based on transistors. The basic principle behind quantum computation is that quantum properties can be used to represent data and perform operations on these data.[1] A theoretical model is the quantum Turing machine, also known as the universal quantum computer.
Although quantum computing is still in its infancy, experiments have been carried out in which quantum computational operations were executed on a very small number of qubits (quantum bit). Both practical and theoretical research continues, and many national government and military funding agencies support quantum computing research to develop quantum computers for both civilian and national security purposes, such as cryptanalysis.[2]
If large-scale quantum computers can be built, they will be able to solve certain problems much faster than any current classical computers (for example Shor's algorithm). Quantum computers do not allow the computation of functions that are not theoretically computable by classical computers, i.e. they do not alter the Church–Turing thesis. The gain is only in efficiency.
Basis
A classical computer has a memory made up of bits, where each bit represents either a one or a zero. A quantum computer maintains a sequence of qubits. A single qubit can represent a one, a zero, or, crucially, any quantum superposition of these; moreover, a pair of qubits can be in any quantum superposition of 4 states, and three qubits in any superposition of 8. In general a quantum computer with n qubits can be in an arbitrary superposition of up to 2n different states simultaneously (this compares to a normal computer that can only be in one of these 2n states at any one time). A quantum computer operates by manipulating those qubits with a fixed sequence of quantum logic gates. The sequence of gates to be applied is called a quantum algorithm.
An example of an implementation of qubits for a quantum computer could start with the use of particles with two spin states: "down" and "up" (typically written |{\downarrow}\rangle and |{\uparrow}\rangle, or |0{\rangle} and |1{\rangle}). But in fact any system possessing an observable quantity A which is conserved under time evolution and such that A has at least two discrete and sufficiently spaced consecutive eigenvalues, is a suitable candidate for implementing a qubit. This is true because any such system can be mapped onto an effective spin-1/2 system.
[edit] Bits vs. qubits
Qubits are made up of controlled particles and the means of control (e.g. devices that trap particles and switch them from one state to another).[3]
Consider first a classical computer that operates on a three-bit register. The state of the computer at any time is a probability distribution over the 23 = 8 different three-bit strings 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111. If it is a deterministic computer, then it is in exactly one of these states with probability 1. However, if it is a probabilistic computer, then there is a possibility of it being in any one of a number of different states. We can describe this probabilistic state by eight nonnegative numbers a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h (where a = probability computer is in state 000, b = probability computer is in state 001, etc.). There is a restriction that these probabilities sum to 1.
The state of a three-qubit quantum computer is similarly described by an eight-dimensional vector (a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h), called a ket. However, instead of adding to one, the sum of the squares of the coefficient magnitudes, | a | 2 + | b | 2 + ... + | h | 2, must equal one. Moreover, the coefficients are complex numbers. Since states are represented by complex wavefunctions, two states being added together will undergo interference. This is a key difference between quantum computing and probabilistic classical computing.[4]
If you measure the three qubits, then you will observe a three-bit string. The probability of measuring a string will equal the squared magnitude of that string's coefficients (using our example, probability that we read state as 000 = | a | 2, probability that we read state as 001 = | b | 2, etc..). Thus a measurement of the quantum state with coefficients (a,b,...,h) gives the classical probability distribution ( | a | 2, | b | 2,..., | h | 2). We say that the quantum state "collapses" to a classical state.
Note that an eight-dimensional vector can be specified in many different ways, depending on what basis you choose for the space. The basis of three-bit strings 000, 001, ..., 111 is known as the computational basis, and is often convenient, but other bases of unit-length, orthogonal vectors can also be used. Ket notation is often used to make explicit the choice of basis. For example, the state (a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h) in the computational basis can be written as
a\,|000\rangle + b\,|001\rangle + c\,|010\rangle + d\,|011\rangle + e\,|100\rangle + f\,|101\rangle + g\,|110\rangle + h\,|111\rangle, where, e.g., |010\rangle = (0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0).
The computational basis for a single qubit (two dimensions) is |0\rangle = (1,0), |1\rangle = (0,1), but another common basis are the eigenvectors of the Pauli-x operator: |+\rangle = \tfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}} \left(1,1\right) and |-\rangle = \tfrac{1}{\sqrt{2}} \left(1,-1\right).
Note that although recording a classical state of n bits, a 2n-dimensional probability distribution, requires an exponential number of real numbers, practically we can always think of the system as being exactly one of the n-bit strings—we just don't know which one. Quantum mechanically, this is not the case, and all 2n complex coefficients need to be kept track of to see how the quantum system evolves. For example, a 300-qubit quantum computer has a state described by 2300 (approximately 1090) complex numbers, more than the number of atoms in the observable universe.
Operation
While a classical three-bit state and a quantum three-qubit state are both eight-dimensional vectors, they are manipulated quite differently for classical or quantum computation. For computing in either case, the system must be initialized, for example into the all-zeros string, |000\rangle, corresponding to the vector (1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0). In classical randomized computation, the system evolves according to the application of stochastic matrices, which preserve that the probabilities add up to one (i.e., preserve the L1 norm). In quantum computation, on the other hand, allowed operations are unitary matrices, which are effectively rotations (they preserve that the sum of the squares add up to one, the Euclidean or L2 norm). (Exactly what unitaries can be applied depend on the physics of the quantum device.) Consequently, since rotations can be undone by rotating backward, quantum computations are reversible. (Technically, quantum operations can be probabilistic combinations of unitaries, so quantum computation really does generalize classical computation. See quantum circuit for a more precise formulation.)
Finally, upon termination of the algorithm, the result needs to be read off. In the case of a classical computer, we sample from the probability distribution on the three-bit register to obtain one definite three-bit string, say 000. Quantum mechanically, we measure the three-qubit state, which is equivalent to collapsing the quantum state down to a classical distribution (with the coefficients in the classical state being the squared magnitudes of the coefficients for the quantum state, as described above) followed by sampling from that distribution. Note that this destroys the original quantum state. Many algorithms will only give the correct answer with a certain probability, however by repeatedly initializing, running and measuring the quantum computer, the probability of getting the correct answer can be increased.
For more details on the sequences of operations used for various quantum algorithms, see universal quantum computer, Shor's algorithm, Grover's algorithm, Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm, amplitude amplification, quantum Fourier transform, quantum gate, quantum adiabatic algorithm and quantum error correction.
Potential
Integer factorization is believed to be computationally infeasible with an ordinary computer for large integers if they are the product of few prime numbers (e.g., products of two 300-digit primes).[5] By comparison, a quantum computer could efficiently solve this problem using Shor's algorithm to find its factors. This ability would allow a quantum computer to decrypt many of the cryptographic systems in use today, in the sense that there would be a polynomial time (in the number of digits of the integer) algorithm for solving the problem. In particular, most of the popular public key ciphers are based on the difficulty of factoring integers (or the related discrete logarithm problem which can also be solved by Shor's algorithm), including forms of RSA. These are used to protect secure Web pages, encrypted email, and many other types of data. Breaking these would have significant ramifications for electronic privacy and security.
However, other existing cryptographic algorithms don't appear to be broken by these algorithms.[6][7] Some public-key algorithms are based on problems other than the integer factorization and discrete logarithm problems to which Shor's algorithm applies, like the McEliece cryptosystem based on a problem in coding theory.[6][8] Lattice based cryptosystems are also not known to be broken by quantum computers, and finding a polynomial time algorithm for solving the dihedral hidden subgroup problem, which would break many lattice based cryptosystems, is a well-studied open problem.[9] It has been proven that applying Grover's algorithm to break a symmetric (secret key) algorithm by brute force requires roughly 2n/2 invocations of the underlying cryptographic algorithm, compared with roughly 2n in the classical case,[10] meaning that symmetric key lengths are effectively halved: AES-256 would have the same security against an attack using Grover's algorithm that AES-128 has against classical brute-force search (see Key size). Quantum cryptography could potentially fulfill some of the functions of public key cryptography.
Besides factorization and discrete logarithms, quantum algorithms offering a more than polynomial speedup over the best known classical algorithm have been found for several problems,[11] including the simulation of quantum physical processes from chemistry and solid state physics, the approximation of Jones polynomials, and solving Pell's equation. No mathematical proof has been found that shows that an equally fast classical algorithm cannot be discovered, although this is considered unlikely. For some problems, quantum computers offer a polynomial speedup. The most well-known example of this is quantum database search, which can be solved by Grover's algorithm using quadratically fewer queries to the database than are required by classical algorithms. In this case the advantage is provable. Several other examples of provable quantum speedups for query problems have subsequently been discovered, such as for finding collisions in two-to-one functions and evaluating NAND trees.
Consider a problem that has these four properties:
1. The only way to solve it is to guess answers repeatedly and check them,
2. There are n possible answers to check,
3. Every possible answer takes the same amount of time to check, and
4. There are no clues about which answers might be better: generating possibilities randomly is just as good as checking them in some special order.
An example of this is a password cracker that attempts to guess the password for an encrypted file (assuming that the password has a maximum possible length).
For problems with all four properties, the time for a quantum computer to solve this will be proportional to the square root of n. That can be a very large speedup, reducing some problems from years to seconds. It can be used to attack symmetric ciphers such as Triple DES and AES by attempting to guess the secret key.
Grover's algorithm can also be used to obtain a quadratic speed-up [over a brute-force search] for a class of problems known as NP-complete.
Since chemistry and nanotechnology rely on understanding quantum systems, and such systems are impossible to simulate in an efficient manner classically, many believe quantum simulation will be one of the most important applications of quantum computing.[12]
There are a number of practical difficulties in building a quantum computer, and thus far quantum computers have only solved trivial problems. David DiVincenzo, of IBM, listed the following requirements for a practical quantum computer:[13]
* scalable physically to increase the number of qubits;
* qubits can be initialized to arbitrary values;
* quantum gates faster than decoherence time;
* universal gate set;
* qubits can be read easily.
Quantum decoherence
One of the greatest challenges is controlling or removing quantum decoherence. This usually means isolating the system from its environment as the slightest interaction with the external world would cause the system to decohere. This effect is irreversible, as it is non-unitary, and is usually something that should be highly controlled, if not avoided. Decoherence times for candidate systems, in particular the transverse relaxation time T2 (for NMR and MRI technology, also called the dephasing time), typically range between nanoseconds and seconds at low temperature.[4]
These issues are more difficult for optical approaches as the timescales are orders of magnitude shorter and an often-cited approach to overcoming them is optical pulse shaping. Error rates are typically proportional to the ratio of operating time to decoherence time, hence any operation must be completed much more quickly than the decoherence time.
If the error rate is small enough, it is thought to be possible to use quantum error correction, which corrects errors due to decoherence, thereby allowing the total calculation time to be longer than the decoherence time. An often cited figure for required error rate in each gate is 10−4. This implies that each gate must be able to perform its task in one 10,000th of the decoherence time of the system.
Meeting this scalability condition is possible for a wide range of systems. However, the use of error correction brings with it the cost of a greatly increased number of required qubits. The number required to factor integers using Shor's algorithm is still polynomial, and thought to be between L and L2, where L is the number of bits in the number to be factored; error correction algorithms would inflate this figure by an additional factor of L. For a 1000-bit number, this implies a need for about 104 qubits without error correction.[14] With error correction, the figure would rise to about 107 qubits. Note that computation time is about L2 or about 107 steps and on 1 MHz, about 10 seconds.
A very different approach to the stability-decoherence problem is to create a topological quantum computer with anyons, quasi-particles used as threads and relying on braid theory to form stable logic gates.[15][16]
Monday, December 13, 2010
EC 601 Digital MOdule I,II,III
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 15MB
Download pdf
FLASH 15MB
Download swf
Basic Circuit Concepts EC 603 Module III
You can download the full RAR from the following links
RAR | 2.7MB | Password:epulse
Download RAR
Transformer Tests EC 302 Module I
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 2.9MB
Download pdf
FLASH 2.9MB
Download swf
Noise EC 405 Module III
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 6.1MB
Download pdf
FLASH 6.1MB
Download swf
Power Transistor & Power Mosfet EC 406 mod I
Other 8 Bit µP and 8086
Click to view on fullscreen
You can download the full swf+pdf as a rar from the following links
RAR 1.5MB Password:epulse
Download
8085 Architecture EC 402
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 1.5MB
Download pdf
FLASH 1.5MB
Download swf
Advanced Web Server Mini Project
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 1.5MB |Password:epulse
Download
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Laplace Transforms EC 301 Module III
PDF 9MB
Download pdf
FLASH 6 MB
Download swf
Neuroprosthetics
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 5.6MB
Download
This seminar has been takenby RENCY JACOB
Advanced Power Management Techniques in Next Generation Wireless Networks
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 1.93MB
Download
This seminar has been taken by ARJUN RAMAKRISHNAN
Thursday, December 9, 2010
UPS EC 406 module 4
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 24MB
Download pdf
FLASH 6.4MB | Filetype:RAR | PASSWORD:epulse
Download swf
Inverters EC 406 Module 3
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 11.3MB
Download pdf
FLASH 19MB | Filetype:RAR | PASSWORD:epulse
Download swf
Choppers Ec 406 Module 3
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 7MB
Download pdf
FLASH 12.2MB | Filetype:RAR | PASSWORD:epulse
Download swf
Phase Controlled Rectifiers Ec 406 Module 2
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 8MB
Download pdf
FLASH 22.4MB | Filetype:RAR | PASSWORD:epulse
Download swf
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Systems Engineering in Wireless Communications
Download
Uploading.com
Electric Drives - EC 406 Power Electronics
You can download the full flashpaper version or pdf from the following links
PDF 11MB
Download pdf
FLASH 22.14MB RAR PASSWORD : epulse
Download swf
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
D.T Speech Signal Processing ,Thomas Quatieri
Click Here To Download
It is in djvu format and the djvu viewer is also included
RAR | 21 MB | Password:epulse
Optical Fiber Communication , Gerd Kaiser
Click Here To Download
RAR | 19MB | Password : epulse
Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice - EC 802
Publisher: Pearson Edition/Prentice Hall | ISBN: 0130422320 | edition 2002 | PDF | 640 pages | 19,9 mb
RAR | 19.9MB | Password : epulse
Monochrome and Colour Television,RR Gulati - EC801
A full course on audio and video engineering. Monochrome and Color TV by RR Gulati is full course text book with illustrative features. Textbook of EC801.
Click Here To Download
RAR | 5.67MB | Password : epulse
The Electronics Hand Book edited by JC Whitaker - EC 801
RAR | 22MB | Password : epulse
Digital Signal Processing: Principles, Algorithms and Applications
Base 64 Encoding
Click To View On Full Screen
You can download the doc+swf+ppt as a rar file by clicking below
RAR | 1MB |Password:epulse
Download
This seminar has been taken by ASWIN DEV P K
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Matlab m Files for Covolution,modulation etc
Click to download rar 6KB
You need winrar or winzip or 7zip or Peazip etc to extract
If you don't have them download the self extracting executable by clicking below link
Click to download exe 123KB
Friday, December 3, 2010
Brain Drop
Proteus Design Suit 7.7
Proteus is software for microprocessor simulation, schematic capture, and printed circuit board (PCB) design. It is developed by Labcenter Electronics.
System Components
ISIS Schematic Capture - a tool for entering designs.
PROSPICE Mixed mode SPICE simulation - industry standard SPICE3F5 simulator combined with a digital simulator.
ARES PCB Layout - PCB design system with automatic component placer, rip-up and retry auto-router and interactive design rule checking.
VSM - Virtual System Modelling lets cosimulate embedded software for popular micro-controllers alongside hardware design.
System Benefits Integrated package with common user interface and fully context sensitive help.
Download
Megaupload
or
Hotfile
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Nemerical Methods Using Matlab
Download
Mediafire
Direct link.Use IDM to speed up download
Analog Filters using MATLAB
Digital Image Processing Using MATLAB
Transforms and Applications Primer for Engineers with Examples and MATLAB
Introduction To Matlab 7 For Engineeres
A complete course on the basic matlab tchniques for engineers,
Download
Mediafire
Direct link.Use IDM to accelerate download speed
MatLab: The Language Of Technical Computing
Key Features
* High-level language for technical computing.
* Development environment for managing code, files, and data.
* Interactive tools for iterative exploration, design, and problem solving.
* Mathematical functions for linear algebra, statistics, Fourier analysis, filtering, optimization, and numerical integration.
* 2-D and 3-D graphics functions for visualizing data.
* Tools for building custom graphical user interfaces.
* Functions for integrating MATLAB based algorithms with external applications and languages, such as C, C++, Fortran, Java, COM, and Microsoft Excel.
Download
Matlab R2010a (32bit + 64 bit) ISO
Sunday, November 28, 2010
VHDL Primer,J. Bhasker
Electronic Circuit Analysis,Lal Kishore
Solid State Electronics Devices,Ben.G.Streetman
Download
Uploading.com
Electronic Devices and Circuits,K. Lal Kishore
Download
Ziddu.com
Integrated Electronics, Milman & Halkias
Download
Rapidshare
Microelectronic circuits,Sedra & Smith
Download the two parts seperately and join them using winrar .
Download
part1
part2
Digital Fundamentals,Flyod & Jain
Download
Depositfiles
Modern Power Electronics and AC Drives, Bimal K. Bose
Download
Megaupload
Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Erwin Kreyszig
A Full text book of mathematics for the full Electronics Course
Download
Filesonic
or
Filefactory
or
Hotfile