55 mph is a speed corresponding to 55 miles per hour, equating to about 90 km/h. Common usages include:
*In many states of the United States, a very common speed limit for rural secondary roads and many urban freeways.
*The 55 mph national speed limit from 1974 through 1987.
Slang for this speed is double nickels.
*In many states of the United States, a very common speed limit for rural secondary roads and many urban freeways.
*The 55 mph national speed limit from 1974 through 1987.
Slang for this speed is double nickels.
Reasons for my deletion request: 1) duplicate to existing article MySAP Business Suite, which could be moved to this name 2) lack of useful content, mostly advertising language --Mopskatze (talk) 16:08, 25 January 2008 (UTC)
Headline text
SAP Business Suite is a family of flexible, best-of-breed, business applications developed by SAP AG. This applications are built for complete integration, scalability and collaboration over the Internet.
This applications by their own, help manage most critical business processes and all together make a very integrated suite that adds value to all areas of an enterprise and its external value chain.
They are based on the integration and application platform, called SAP NetWeaver, reducing the TCO across the complete IT landscape and supports evolution of this components to a services based architecture.
Headline text
SAP Business Suite is a family of flexible, best-of-breed, business applications developed by SAP AG. This applications are built for complete integration, scalability and collaboration over the Internet.
This applications by their own, help manage most critical business processes and all together make a very integrated suite that adds value to all areas of an enterprise and its external value chain.
They are based on the integration and application platform, called SAP NetWeaver, reducing the TCO across the complete IT landscape and supports evolution of this components to a services based architecture.
Con Tinta is a coalition of Chicano/Latino cultural activist poets and writers who believe in affirming a positive and pro-active presence in American literature. Con Tinta's mission is to create awareness through the cultivation of emerging talent, through the promotion and presentation of artistic expression, and through the collective voice of support to its members, communities, and allies.
Con Tinta Advisory Circle:
*Kathleen Alcalá
*Brenda Cárdenas
*Lisa Chávez
*Rigoberto González
*Lorraine López
*Daniel Olivas
*Richard Yañez
Con Tinta Advisory Circle:
*Kathleen Alcalá
*Brenda Cárdenas
*Lisa Chávez
*Rigoberto González
*Lorraine López
*Daniel Olivas
*Richard Yañez
The Capcom CPS Changer was released in 1994 and was perhaps inspired by Neo-Geo. Capcom released the Capcom Power System Changer (not to be confused with the arcade CPS, Capcom Play System) in 1994, as an attempt to sell their arcade games in a home-friendly format. The CPS Changer adaptor was basically an encased SuperGun (Television JAMMA adapter), and was compatible with most JAMMA standard PCBs. Capcom's 'protection' against people using the CPS Changer on other arcade boards was the physical shape of the device. On a normal JAMMA PCB it would not attach firmly and tended to lean at odd angles, but it would work. The CPS Changer had outputs for composite video, s-video and line-level mono audio.
The CPS Changer was released alongside a joystick called the "CPS Fighter", which had the same connection as the Super Famicom/Super Nintendo, and it was later released in North America for that system. It was the first serious home joystick using arcade parts from a major manufacturer, and proved quite popular. It was later released for Sega's Megadrive and Genesis.
All of the CPS Changer games were based on Capcom's CPS-1 arcade hardware. The CPS Changer games were simply arcade PCBs in a special plastic shell suitable for home use. This concept was later re-used in Capcom's arcade-only CPS-2 hardware. Some CPS-1 games were changed slightly for home release, sometimes including debugging features or other easter eggs .
The CPS Changer was sold as a package deal of the console itself, one CPS Fighter controller, and the Street Fighter II Turbo game for 39,800 yen. Additional games were sold for about 20,000 yen.
The CPS Changer sold poorly, and support was dropped in March 1996 after releasing the platform's last hurrah, a back-ported version of Street Fighter Zero. Originally released on the superior CPS-2 hardware, this special CPS-1 version, released at a premium at 35,000 yen, was degraded slightly for the older hardware. It had fewer frames of animation for the game characters, fewer onscreen colours, and sound effects sampled at a lower rate.
It is interesting to note that this last release, Street Fighter Zero, was used to break the encryption on Capcom's nigh impervious CPS-2 hardware. By analyzing the older, simpler CPS-1 game and comparing the code against the similar CPS-2 hardware it finally became possible to back up, emulate and preserve CPS-2 games.
Eleven total games were released for the CPS Changer:
*Captain Commando (1995)
*Final Fight (1994)
*The King of Dragons (1995)
*Knights of the Round (1995)
*Muscle Bomber:The Body Explosion (1994)
*Muscle Bomber Duo: Burn Up Warriors (1995)
*Quiz Capcom World 2 (1994)
*Street Fighter II Champion Edition (1994)
*Street Fighter II Turbo (1994, Pack-in)
*Street Fighter Zero (1996)
*Tenchi O Kurau II (1995)
The CPS Changer was released alongside a joystick called the "CPS Fighter", which had the same connection as the Super Famicom/Super Nintendo, and it was later released in North America for that system. It was the first serious home joystick using arcade parts from a major manufacturer, and proved quite popular. It was later released for Sega's Megadrive and Genesis.
All of the CPS Changer games were based on Capcom's CPS-1 arcade hardware. The CPS Changer games were simply arcade PCBs in a special plastic shell suitable for home use. This concept was later re-used in Capcom's arcade-only CPS-2 hardware. Some CPS-1 games were changed slightly for home release, sometimes including debugging features or other easter eggs .
The CPS Changer was sold as a package deal of the console itself, one CPS Fighter controller, and the Street Fighter II Turbo game for 39,800 yen. Additional games were sold for about 20,000 yen.
The CPS Changer sold poorly, and support was dropped in March 1996 after releasing the platform's last hurrah, a back-ported version of Street Fighter Zero. Originally released on the superior CPS-2 hardware, this special CPS-1 version, released at a premium at 35,000 yen, was degraded slightly for the older hardware. It had fewer frames of animation for the game characters, fewer onscreen colours, and sound effects sampled at a lower rate.
It is interesting to note that this last release, Street Fighter Zero, was used to break the encryption on Capcom's nigh impervious CPS-2 hardware. By analyzing the older, simpler CPS-1 game and comparing the code against the similar CPS-2 hardware it finally became possible to back up, emulate and preserve CPS-2 games.
Eleven total games were released for the CPS Changer:
*Captain Commando (1995)
*Final Fight (1994)
*The King of Dragons (1995)
*Knights of the Round (1995)
*Muscle Bomber:The Body Explosion (1994)
*Muscle Bomber Duo: Burn Up Warriors (1995)
*Quiz Capcom World 2 (1994)
*Street Fighter II Champion Edition (1994)
*Street Fighter II Turbo (1994, Pack-in)
*Street Fighter Zero (1996)
*Tenchi O Kurau II (1995)