Industry Predictions Sanjay Gangal
Sanjay Gangal is the President of IBSystems, the parent company of AECCafe.com, MCADCafe, EDACafe.Com, GISCafe.Com, and ShareCG.Com. EDACafe Industry Predictions for 2023 – congatecJanuary 23rd, 2023 by Sanjay Gangal
By Christian Eder, Product Marketing Director, congatecCOM-HPC Mini ushers in a new era Coming at last: Design sprints from COM Express Compact to COM-HPC The first COM-HPC Mini Computer-on-Modules will soon hit the market. The final ratification of the new COM-HPC Mini standard, expected for the first half of 2023, will solve the Gordian knot that developers of ultra-compact COM Express Basic systems have been facing. Once available, COM-HPC Mini modules with 13th generation Intel Core processors (codename Raptor Lake) will complete the ecosystem open to developers of third generation modular high-end embedded and edge applications. An ecosystem which ranges from high-end Server-on-Modules to extremely compact Client-on-Modules that are barely larger than a credit card. Even the most space-constrained COM Express Compact and COM Express Mini solutions can benefit from a high-end performance boost and a significantly larger number of new high-speed interfaces provided from COM-HPC Mini. Thus, entire product families can migrate to the new PICMG standard – without requiring significant modification of the internal system design and housing despite the larger module and carrier board dimensions.
Where migration was stuck COM-HPC Size A measuring 95×120 mm (11.875 mm²) is still almost 32% larger than the COM Express Compact form factor, which measures 95×95 mm (9.025 mm²). From a footprint standpoint, that’s 25 mm too wide to migrate existing COM Express designs to COM-HPC. Since COM Express Compact is the most widespread COM Express form factor and the high-end using the even larger COM Express Basic form factor, many developers faced considerable challenges – if only in terms of system design dimensions. But smaller is now possible. That’s why COM-HPC Mini with its 95×60 mm is a real liberator, opening up entirely new perspectives for the many ultra-compact system designs in particular. Admittedly, COM-HPC has only 400 pins, which is 40 pins less than COM Express Basic (440). However, most ultra-compact system designs never utilize the entire interface package anyway. With 16 PCIe and 16 USB interfaces, 3 or even 4 display interfaces, plus many other of the latest peripheral interfaces, including 2x MIPI CSI for cameras, CAN and optional Serdes, the COM-HPC Mini specification really boasts everything that is state-of-the-art today. Even functional safety support has been added as a new feature. At the same time, the new specification has turned its back on legacy interfaces – but without going too radical, because 2x SATA is still an option.
BU3: Die Migration von COM Express zu COM-HPC bringt zahlreiche Interface-Verbesserungen mit sich Newer is better in the long term Many developers of new applications will also appreciate the added design security, as the COM‑HPC connector is specified for significantly higher data throughput than COM Express. It is true that the COM Express 3.1 specification, which was launched at the end of 2022 and supports PCIe 4.0 with up to 16 Gbit/s, also provides an upgrade path. However, the end of the line for further performance increases is already in sight. As the recent launch of 13th generation Intel Core processors showed, the gap is beginning to open as COM-HPC simply offers more. PCIe 5.0 is already supported by this standard, which ultimately enables twice the data throughput. But there’s no need for developers to get nervous if they can live with the limitations of COM Express; COM Express modules will be available for many years to come. However, those who want to align their designs with the latest technology standards can now upgrade existing compact designs with considerably less effort. A performance leap to COM-HPC is essential for many new applications as requirements are increasing rapidly: AI-based video analytics for situational awareness demands extremely high bandwidths with increasing camera resolutions. Voice control must be latency-free. AI is required to process higher resolution data streams. Graphics in combination with augmented reality is becoming more demanding, while parallel data processing in collaborative Industry 4.0 processes requires minimal latencies for real-time as data throughput increases. Last but not least, cybersecurity also demands more computing power. In addition, system developers are looking for ways to significantly optimize their platforms for the latest connectivity technologies such as Thunderbolt 4. Thunderbolt 4 ports implement power charging, bidirectional data transfer and video display via a single USB-C cable. However, this requires a bandwidth of up to 40 Gbit/s, which is not feasible with COM Express, even in the 3.1 specification. Take off with 13th generation Intel Core processors Numerous factors therefore speak in favor of the new COM-HPC standard. The launch of 13th generation Intel Core processors acts as an accelerator that will speed the introduction of such new system platforms. I expect a rapid and massive increase in series production of OEM designs based on these new COM-HPC Mini modules, since the new processors offer enormous improvements in many features while being fully hardware-compatible with their predecessors, which makes implementation very fast and easy. The modules based on the new COM-HPC standard open new horizons for developers in terms of data throughput, I/O bandwidth and performance density with Thunderbolt and superior PCIe support up to Gen 5. The COM Express 3.1 compliant modules, on the other hand, primarily secure investments in existing OEM designs with upgrade options for more data throughput thanks to PCIe Gen 4 support. COM-HPC Mini is extremely robust If you now imagine the new Intel processors on COM-HPC Mini and consider ruggedness features such as soldered RAM and support for the extended temperature range, it is easy to see how universally these new modules can be deployed in system solutions that were based on COM Express Basic up to now. Category: Predictions |