Common Building Block
Common Building Block (CBB) was a set of technical standards for laptop components introduced by Intel in 2005, and adopted by some manufacturers.
Creation
In 2004, the Common Building Block program promoted the use of industry-accepted mechanical and electrical specifications for three notebook components: 14.1-inch, 15-inch, and 15.4-inch liquid crystal displays (LCDs); 9.5mm and 12.7mm optical disc drives (ODDs); and 2.5-inch hard disk drives (HDDs). The program consisted of:
- A Web site to provide a centralized repository of information about the program, participants, and platform and ingredient specifications
- A continually updated list of CBB-compliant ingredients (submitted by suppliers)
- A testing and verification service for candidate products
The defunct repository site mobileformfactors.org was established to standardize components, and included:
- Hard disk drives
- Optical disc drives
- Liquid crystal display panels
- Battery packs
- AC/DC power adapters
- Keyboards
- Customizable notebook panels
gollark: Wow, I should get one of those nebula ones.
gollark: The trick is - golds don't actually have to be gold, just... gold-colored... and shiny.
gollark: Presumably golds themselves are actually just coppers with oddly discoloured pigmentation.
gollark: Gold *itself* can't tarnish, according to the interwebs, but normally it's alloyed with stuff which can.
gollark: Other stuff tarnishes.
References
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