K
kony
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Not at all. If you work in electronics, it has a very specific
meaning.
yes, and it's not what you think it means.
DISCRETE component is the applicable term in electronics.
"Subsystem" sometimes, to diffentiate between groups of
discretes that are function specific vs. the whole product,
but merely stating "component" is not suggestive of a
discrete component until you have built the context
previously which was not the case in several computer
hardware groups.
We were talking about hard drives here. Get a clue.
Yes, a hard drive is a component in a PC, of HARDWARE, etc,
etc. I didn't call it a component though, I called it a
part, and if you're too clueless to accept it, that's your
problem.
You are wrong.
Not generic at all, dipshit. In fact, the term has a quite specific
meaning in the industry, before dopes like you started generisizing
everything.
It has a specific GENERIC meaning. It does not define the
testing parameters which vary per device.
Wrong again. ENTIRE rooms are utilized at elevated temperatures,
not just some "oven". Hence the term "burn-in lab".
Depends on what's being tested, I mean the part. Oops,
you're too anal to know what a "part" is, so I'll make this
one concession and write "whole product".