It's a low cost solution, mainly developed because copper wiring for these speeds will either be extremely limited in length or very expensive.
Sounds like v 1.0 of LightPeak will be electrical, not optical.
you already have an ready commercial interface for transmiting data at 17.3 Gb/s
DisplayPort - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edit: Forgot to say that it runs on copper.
DisplayPort - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edit: Forgot to say that it runs on copper.
Let's see: 10G over CAT6A is 55m max. That's a fairly delicate cable BTW, too much bending or hanging out of an outlet for too long (just it's own weight) will ruin performance. But it's less than 1$/m so that's fine for widespread usage in buildings.
Displayport indeed supports 17.3Gbps, but only for up to 3m. It's also fairly expensive, at around 10 times the price of CAT6A.
And there's infiniband, running up to 30 Gbps @ x12/SDR, and even higher in DDR or QDR configurations. But those cables are around 100 times the price of CAT6A, and again 3m max. in general.
It's a trend: as we raise the bandwidth, the maximum cable length goes down and the price goes up. We're not too far from the point where optical fibres are cheaper to use, even in everyday equipment. And that's where Lightpeak is for: a chip with 4 links is projected to cost around 10$, and if we look at the patching price: short OM3 cables are around the same price of displayport. But OM3 is capable of doing runs of 600m instead of just 3m.
Going back to the USB receiver: Russ, is it possible to design it with a standard IDC connection (AKA what's on most PC mainboards)? That way people could use the cheap USB brackets delivered with many mainboards to mount it in the chassis. They're cheap and very easy to mount.
I mean brackets like this one: http://www.createch.com.tw/images/usb/usb-bracket01-x30-1-80.jpg
Displayport indeed supports 17.3Gbps, but only for up to 3m. It's also fairly expensive, at around 10 times the price of CAT6A.
And there's infiniband, running up to 30 Gbps @ x12/SDR, and even higher in DDR or QDR configurations. But those cables are around 100 times the price of CAT6A, and again 3m max. in general.
It's a trend: as we raise the bandwidth, the maximum cable length goes down and the price goes up. We're not too far from the point where optical fibres are cheaper to use, even in everyday equipment. And that's where Lightpeak is for: a chip with 4 links is projected to cost around 10$, and if we look at the patching price: short OM3 cables are around the same price of displayport. But OM3 is capable of doing runs of 600m instead of just 3m.
Going back to the USB receiver: Russ, is it possible to design it with a standard IDC connection (AKA what's on most PC mainboards)? That way people could use the cheap USB brackets delivered with many mainboards to mount it in the chassis. They're cheap and very easy to mount.
I mean brackets like this one: http://www.createch.com.tw/images/usb/usb-bracket01-x30-1-80.jpg
On the plus side I am having great results on my mac.
Well that's the news I wanted to hear!
(Mac convert)
Well - if it works for mac it works for me too! Would be one of the first times that a non-apple driver works first on this platform so please do go ahead with the thing! The others can wait like we have learned to.Well that's the news I wanted to hear!
(Mac convert)
Cheers,
Nic
Well there are two main issues.
Windows driver not quite up to snuff (in initital testing).
That is the sample drive that comes with the XMOS developer kit?
Should any USB Audio class 2 driver work or do you need any extensions for your board?
Cheers
Thomas
Well - if it works for mac it works for me too! Would be one of the first times that a non-apple driver works first on this platform so please do go ahead with the thing! The others can wait like we have learned to.
Cheers,
Nic
Yes!! Same thing here.
What about the Linux side of things?
I don't know if this helps but it seems there is somebody working on the alsa drivers...
XMOS USB Audio Class 2.0 Reference Design -- ALSA Devel
Apart from this I have the impression that the audio industry doesn't care about linux too much... but they are wrong
Best Wishes
Pietro
I don't know if this helps but it seems there is somebody working on the alsa drivers...
XMOS USB Audio Class 2.0 Reference Design -- ALSA Devel
Apart from this I have the impression that the audio industry doesn't care about linux too much... but they are wrong
Best Wishes
Pietro
Thanks for the link. Does this mean that I could use this driver with the TPA USB device under Linux? And yes, it is wrong to ignore Linux...
Am I the only one that received "ghost posts" that are not shown up here?
Some posts completely unrelated to the USB Module were removed.
Am I the only one that received "ghost posts" that are not shown up here?
Regards,
Regi
Nope, you're not the only one.
Edit: okay Brian
I'm in for Mac as well BTW
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