Now boasting a 100% brighter screen, increased processing power, and faster graphics engine, the Tiger Touch II is the most specified Titan console.
The Avolites Tiger Touch II represents the perfect combination of power and portability. This third-generation console is packed with enough power for complex shows, yet small and light enough to fly in standard hold luggage. The console features SMPTE timecode support and a redesigned button layout to match the entire Titan range.
In order to update the console to version 12 of the Titan, it will be necessary to purchase and install a USB dongle called AVOKEY.
Serial 02006 - 03065
You need to order:
- AVOKEYINT
- 1x5 way to USB-A Cable (spare part code 8000-6102)
Once you've received your AVOKEYINT and 1x5 way to USB-A Cable, you will be required to connect the USB-A Cable to the motherboard. This cable will provide an additional USB port for the AvoKey.
Click here to view the installation guide: https://www.avolites.com/Portals/0/Downloads/Manuals/AvoKey/8000-6102 TT2-2-3K AVOKEY upgrade with 1808-0028.pdf
Serial 03066 - 4020
You need to order only AVOKEYINT
Once you've received your AVOKEYINT, you will be required to connect this directly to the available (Blue) USB port inside the console (on the motherboard).
Click here to view the installation guide: https://www.avolites.com/Portals/0/Downloads/Manuals/AvoKey/8000-6101 TT2 AVOKEY no cable.pdf
Serial 04021 - 05001
You need to order only AVOKEYINT
Once you've received your AVOKEYINT, you will be required to connect this directly to the available (Red) USB port inside the console (on the motherboard).
Serial 5001 and above include a factory fitted AvoKey.
Therefore, you do not need to purchase an AvoKey. alltransistors
People thought he was mad. The IEEE Spectrum ran a hit piece: “The Ultimate Retro-Computing Grail or Hoarding?”. Wired called him “The Sisyphus of Silicon.” But the parts came. From basement hoarders in Ohio, from Chinese recyclers who pulled rare-earth elements from e-waste mountains, from a decommissioned Cray-2 and a broken hearing aid from 1974. He mounted each transistor in a custom frame of machined aluminum, like a specimen. Each one was labeled: 2N3904 (General Electric, 1966). J201 (Fairchild, 1972). BS170 (Zetex, 1989).
The last thing Silas ever built was a lie.
A week later, a grad student from MIT found him. Silas had passed away in his chair, a soldering iron still warm in his hand. The Alltransistors was still humming. The D-cell battery was dead, but the circuit had somehow switched to a new power source: the ambient electromagnetic noise of the planet itself. Radio static, lightning strikes, the whisper of a thousand cell towers.
People thought he was mad. The IEEE Spectrum ran a hit piece: “The Ultimate Retro-Computing Grail or Hoarding?”. Wired called him “The Sisyphus of Silicon.” But the parts came. From basement hoarders in Ohio, from Chinese recyclers who pulled rare-earth elements from e-waste mountains, from a decommissioned Cray-2 and a broken hearing aid from 1974. He mounted each transistor in a custom frame of machined aluminum, like a specimen. Each one was labeled: 2N3904 (General Electric, 1966). J201 (Fairchild, 1972). BS170 (Zetex, 1989).
The last thing Silas ever built was a lie.
A week later, a grad student from MIT found him. Silas had passed away in his chair, a soldering iron still warm in his hand. The Alltransistors was still humming. The D-cell battery was dead, but the circuit had somehow switched to a new power source: the ambient electromagnetic noise of the planet itself. Radio static, lightning strikes, the whisper of a thousand cell towers.
