CAN-ready industrial PC sips under three Watts
Mar 16, 2011 — by Eric Brown — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 3 viewsArtila Electronics announced an ARM9-based, Linux-ready industrial box computer with dual, isolated CAN bus interfaces, plus the SocketCAN open source CAN stack. The Matrix-522 is equipped with an Atmel AT91SAM9G20 processor clocked at 400MHz, and offers 64MB SDRAM, 128MB of flash, a microSD slot, failover support, an under three-Watt power draw, plus paired sets of Ethernet, USB, and serial ports.
The Matrix-522 is designed for industrial automation, transportation, in-vehicle, and building automation applications, says Artila. The computer builds upon the same processor and basic design used by Artila's earlier Linux-ready industrial box computers, including the Matrix-518 (pictured at right) that was announced in December.
Like the serial-oriented Matrix-518, the Matrix-522 is equipped with the ARM9-based Atmel AT91SAM9G20 processor clocked to 400MHz, and offers the same allotment of 64MB SDRAM, 128MB NAND flash, and 2MB data flash. The latter is used for system backup, and is designed to automatically boot if the NAND flash system fails. In case of failure, the system displays a menu-driven program to help users restore NAND flash images from a USB pen drive or an SD card in the newly available internal microSD slot, says Artila.
Matrix-522
Matrix-522 front port detail
(Click to enlarge)
Matrix-522 rear port detail
Matrix-522 software architecture
Availability
The Matrix-522 appears to be available now at an undisclosed price. More information may be found at the Artila Matrix box computer page, as well as in this Matrix-522 data sheet PDF.
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