Motorola launches new Pentium-II EBX SBC with embedded Linux
Aug 17, 2000 — by Rick Lehrbaum — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 2 viewsMotorola Computer Group introduced the newest member of its MBX family of EBX form-factor single-board computers (SBCs) at LinuxWorld Expo in San Jose, CA this week. The MBX2000 — a high-performance, low power, and compact SBC — complies with the Ampro/Motorola EBX form-factor standard for embedded computer boards. The new Motorola's EBX SBC sports an Intel mobile Pentium II CPU (in the “BGA1” surface mount package), plus a PC compabible system's worth of onboard functions, including interfaces for communications, networking, graphics, and storage. The device can interface directly with both flat-panel displays and Ethernet LANs, making it a complete, ready-to-use system-on-a-board.
In recognition of the excellent match between the MBX2000 and Embedded Linux, Motorola arranged for its new Pentium II EBX SBC to be supported by three prominent Embedded Linux suppliers: Lineo, LynuxWorks, and MontaVista. Additionally, ACT/Technico, a supplier of systems that incorporate Motorola's board-level products, will offer a fully-integrated solution based on the MBX2000, called the EMBoX. All three Embedded Linux suppliers demonstrated their MBX2000 support, running in ACT/Technico EMBoXes at LinuxWorld Expo this week.
Here is a summary of the features of the MBX2000:
- EBX compatible form-factor
- 266/333MHz mobile Intel Pentium II processor (BGA1 chip package)
- Intel 440BX chipset with 66MHz front-side-bus
- 256KB L2 cache
- 1 DIMM slot supporting 3.3V PC100 SDRAM
- 10/100 Mbit Ethernet interface (Intel 82559)
- Intel 69030 VGA/LCD display controller with 4MB video RAM
- I/O ports: 4 RS-232 serial, parallel, floppy, PS/2
keyboard/mouse, dual USB, IrDA, 16 digital I/O - PC/104 and PC/104-Plus expansion (ISA and PCI support)
- Watchdog timer, interval timers, and hardware monitor
- ATA/33 EIDE interface with CompactFlash Type II socket on one channel
- Size: 5.75″ x 8.0″
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.