PC/104 Embedded Consortium Design Winners 68
An anonymous reader writes "The PC/104 Embedded Consortium announced the winners of its first PC/104 Design Contest, at the Embedded Systems Conference today in San Francisco. The awards recognize engineers designing innovative systems and devices based on the consortium's PC/104 and PC/104-Plus standards. Winners were announced in three categories: Commercial for industrial/medical/transportation/other; Commercial for military/aerospace/COTS; and Research Project. Read the full story at Linuxdevices.com. Lots of images!"
wait a sec (Score:5, Funny)
Kickass!
Re:wait a sec (Score:2)
I have no idea what this article is about. I agree with a few others I've seen in the last few days, I have no idea what this project is. 104 key keyboards on my embedded devices? Sweet!
its like a little, square motherboards dealy ... (Score:1)
and not a keyboard. But its neat because one can stack them and add more functionality so the pc's turn out like a cube.
Rapid development? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Go calculate [webcalc.net] something
Re:Rapid development? (Score:1)
One of the greatest aspects is the stacking ability, just place the modules one over the other with them connecting with a header. I've seen everything from I/O with serial/parallel etc to 10/100 ethernet and then of course other interface boards w/ A/
Re:Rapid development? (Score:1)
Re:I'm not comfortable (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I'm not comfortable (Score:4, Interesting)
WOW (Score:4, Insightful)
Top research prize went to a steer by wire system. This is already employed in race cars and ferrari's alike. How is something already in production considered research?
Maybe I am out of touch with the embedded niche, but this seems totally anti-clamictic and a little lame
Re:WOW (Score:2, Interesting)
I have yet to see a Ferrari or race car that employs a steer-by-wire system. TROTTLE-by-wire, yes. The only things that I can think of that use steer-by-wire systems are larger ships, most modern military aircraft, and some civilian aircraft like most (all?) Airbus models.
Maybe you are (Score:5, Insightful)
Modern manufacturing plants are extensively automated. Logic control 30 years ago was all done with hardwired relays and timers, then 20 years ago with programmable logic controllers (PLC's), and now there are virtual PLC's running in x86-based PC's with extensive networking between controllers. There are DSP's in sensors, web guides, vision systems, and even glue gun controls. Technology has driven production speeds higher and higher, and now we need more sophisticated control systems on all sorts of equipment.
Re:Maybe you are (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe somebody can confirm or contradict this. I found it interesting when a friend who's done a lot of industrial control systems told me.
Re:Maybe you are (Score:2)
Well, the PLC shares some qualities with general-purpose computers, namely, the ability to store instuctions. However, I wouldn't call it a computer.
From what I remember during my college work with PLCs: The device is mainly a large number of relays in a box, run by a microcontroller, with numerous hookups for the equipment to be controlled.
Re:WOW (Score:3, Funny)
Re:WOW (Score:4, Informative)
Not exactly. Many cars have a drive-by-wire throttle, even relatively inexpensive cars like Nissan Maximas. All steering is still done by a direct mechanical linkage. There have been a few experimental research and concept cars with drive-by-wire steering.
Re:WOW (Score:4, Insightful)
very good systems (Score:1)
Only problem I've ever had designing something with them, depending of course on the manufacturer who supplies stacks and hd/OS, accessing it from another system or adding external hardware to it. Very embedded. But that's the point
Some Good Info on PC/104 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Some Good Info on PC/104 (Score:4, Interesting)
Noob.
Re:Some Good Info on PC/104 (Score:1)
Re:Some Good Info on PC/104 (Score:1)
The latest spec is PC/104 Plus, which added another connector and is electrically the same as the PCI bus.
Surf to http://pc104.org for the specifications.
I've used PC/104 cards in embedded systems since shortly after they came out. You can get a complete, networkable computer system with any IO/data acquisiti
Re:Some Good Info on PC/104 (Score:1)
PC/104 is hardly new, actually it's been around for a while (initial spec came out in '92), and it's all based around an AT bus (bleah!). Fortunately they already have a replacement, PC/104-Plus, which uses a PCI bus instead of the old AT bus (though it retains backwards compatability). Even that standard has been around for 5 or 6 years though.
The r
PC 104 in a nutshell (Score:5, Informative)
The one characteristic that makes PC104 interesting is the "pass through" bus connector. Consisting of 104 pins (hence it's name), you stack modules of extension card on the base board, and build vertically your components. See link:
PC104 FAQ with pictures [controlled.com]
They tend to be pretty low power consumption, and there are a mind boggling array of PC104 modules out there, from radio modems to GPS receivers to servo controllers and 3 axis accelerometers. For hobby use, I wouldn't really go with them, since they are more expensive than the much cheaper mini-itx boards (which is what I will be using for my next car computer).
Mini-ITX info link [mini-itx.com]
Man, reading through the projects - they outfitted a 1997 Corvette with a "fly by wire" steering. My god, I wish my research lab has the amount of cash handy to buy a corvette for a ressearch project...
-=- Terence
Re:PC 104 in a nutshell (Score:2)
But does it run Linux? (Score:1)
"Its operator interface consists of a quarter-VGA color LCD with a touch screen, driven by a 486 single board computer running Windows CE."
I was hopeing to find some of the winners using Linux, but the only mention of OS in the article was Windows CE.
Whatever works for each individual application I guess!
~Z
Re:But does it run Linux? (Score:3, Informative)
Check out EMAC [emacinc.com]'s page for more info on running Linux. You know with a name like that they must support Linux! ;)
Lots of Images?? (Score:1)
I know it's an old lame joke... (Score:1)
ok, seriuosly, you could create an interesting parallel processing computer in a very small stack from these things, and I've seen some with quite reasonable performance...
something for me to mess with when I win the lottery... until then, I'll stick with the cluster of amazing junk I currently use...
Enjoy
Re:I know it's an old lame joke... (Score:2)
No love for PC/104 (Score:4, Informative)
I have recently come to enjoy working with Soekris boards.. http://www.soekris.com
The guy does things right.. Compact flash slots on board for OS, no over-priced Disk-On-Chip stuff. PCI or mini-pci slots, 133mhz AMD Elan chips, PCMCIA slots on some models.. serial port and simple network bootable flash. and 2-3 PCI 10/100 ethernet chips.. a similar PC/104 board would be stacked 4cm tall with adapter boards, all stuck on a ISA bus.
Re:No love for PC/104 (Score:3, Informative)
For example the system you are talking about can be achieved using only 2 PC/104 boards (+1 board for power), with standard 2,5" HDD if you don't like SSDs. I know because I was just testing such a system yesterday, and you'll find the boards too by browsing the web a bit. And oh wait, you'll also get an 300Mhz processor with that system.
Re:No love for PC/104 (Score:2)
Soekris will have the 300mzh NatSemi CPU in a month or so, and is expected to be under $300.
I like the huge I/O systems you can stack on the PC/104 spec, but with ethernet I/O and other fast bus I/O parts, it's not really necessary to have it stacked on the system board.
I browsed some of these vendors and sites before.. one vendor I talked to at comdex was asking $800 for a base PC/104+ board.
Not that I do much with embeded s
Re:No love for PC/104 (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:No love for PC/104 (Score:2)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewIte
Re:No love for PC/104 (Score:2)
But no second source...
It's a standard (Score:4, Informative)
Similarly, while PC/104 is not new, fast, or high powered, it is stable, robust, and everyone knows it.
Oh, and one of the reasons that 33mhz 486s are used is because they can handle hot environments without melting down. What would happen if you put an Athlon or P4 in an unventilated cabinet in a plating shop in Oklahoma in August? 100 degrees F on the outside of the cabinet.
Another reason for high cost of PC/104 is robustness. How well does the Soekris board handle vibration? Will the CF chip wiggle its way out of the slot? These are used in systems that have to have near-mainframe reliability. If the system crashes (sometimes literally, if it's an automated multiple-hoist line) due to a hardware failure, with a millionm dollars worth of product in the line, there will be a technician on an airplane that day. A stable, robust, PC/104 board is a hell of a lot cheaper than that!
Re:It's a standard (Score:1)
At work I use Kontron (Jumptec) boards in a variety of robots, running linux, I'm very happy with them.
Stupid PC/104 (Score:1)
PC/104 sounded like an embedded dream when i heard about it. Its still one i'm not rich enough to afford.
Re:Stupid PC/104 (Score:5, Insightful)
mobile media (Score:1)
Gimmee a hammer, sailor!! (Score:1)
Wouldn't water be a bigger hazard on a sub than hammers?
*ducking hammer blows from those who take this post seriously*
Re:Gimmee a hammer, sailor!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Condensation, yes. But actual flowing water? By the time the pc-104 device gets wet you probably have bigger problems anyhow...
Submarines get torpedoed and depth charged. This tends to rattle the boat. Hard. Can't have your navigation system blink out just because someone is tossing bombs at you.
Good Stuff. (Score:2, Informative)
These thi
Re:Good Stuff. (Score:1)