DocumentCode
1250488
Title
Industrial electronics: Controllers get smarter, thyristors make inroads, hardware/software goes standard
Author
Kaplan, Gadi
Volume
12
Issue
1
fYear
1975
Firstpage
74
Lastpage
79
Abstract
More automation and computer hierarchical and direct control in manufacturing and testing mark the present and the near future in industrial electronics. The energy crunch is being felt, both directly and indirectly. Energy-conserving testing systems for automobiles are being devised and programmable controllers are being applied in industrial processes to increase efficiency and economy. Power semiconductor devices are growing bigger and getting smarter. The new buzzword is “standardization,” both in instrumentation and in software. CAMAC, a standardized scheme for interfacing computers to data transducers and actuators in on-line systems, and for the design and use of modular electronic data handling equipment, has begun to play a role in industrial control and measurement, both in the U.S. and in Europe. And a unified industrial FORTRAN computer language is in the works.
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.1975.6501823
Filename
6501823
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