Real-Time Clock Subsystem; 1.10 Legacy I/O Controller; Consumer Infrared (Cir) - Intel BLKDZ68DB Technical Product Specification

Desktop board
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1.9

Real-Time Clock Subsystem

A coin-cell battery (CR2032) powers the real-time clock and CMOS memory. When
the computer is not plugged into a wall socket, the battery has an estimated life of
three years. When the computer is plugged in, the standby current from the power
supply extends the life of the battery. The clock is accurate to ± 13 minutes/year at
25 ºC with 3.3 VSB applied via the power supply 5V STBY rail.
NOTE
If the battery and AC power fail, date and time values will be reset and the user will be
notified during the POST.
When the voltage drops below a certain level, the BIOS Setup program settings stored
in CMOS RAM (for example, the date and time) might not be accurate. Replace the
battery with an equivalent one. Figure 1 on page 13 shows the location of the battery.

1.10 Legacy I/O Controller

The I/O controller provides the following features:
Consumer Infrared (CIR) headers
Serial IRQ interface compatible with serialized IRQ support for PCI systems
Intelligent power management, including a programmable wake-up event interface
PCI power management support
The BIOS Setup program provides configuration options for the I/O controller.
1.10.1

Consumer Infrared (CIR)

The Consumer Infrared (CIR) feature is designed to comply with Microsoft Consumer
Infrared usage models. Microsoft Windows Vista and Microsoft Windows 7 are the
supported operating systems.
The CIR feature is made up of two separate pieces: the receiving (receiver) header,
and the output (emitter) header. The receiving header consists of a filtered translated
infrared input compliant with Microsoft CIR specifications, and also a "learning"
infrared input. This learning input is simply a high pass input which the computer can
use to "learn" to speak the infrared communication language of other user remotes.
The emitter header consists of two output ports which the PC can use to emulate
"learned" infrared commands in order to control external electronic hardware.
Customers are required to buy or create their own interface modules to connect to
Intel Desktop Boards for this feature to work.
Product Description
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