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Industrial computer handles rough environments

An Artila Electronics product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team May 8, 2007

The Matrix-520 computer is ideal for industrial applications that require a powerful and reliable front-end controller.

Artila Electronics has released the Matrix-520 ARM9-based, Linux-ready, industrial box computer.

Its fanless ARM9 RISC CPU and strong metal case design make the Matrix-520 ideal for industrial applications that require a powerful and reliable front-end controller.

The Matrix-520, powered by a 180MHz Atmel ARM9 RISC CPU, comes with onboard 32MB SDRAM and a 16MB Flash memory.

In addition, the Matrix-520 integrates two 10/100Mbit/s Ethernet, eight high-speed serial ports, two USB hosts, one audio output port, and 21 programmable digital I/Os into a compact 160 x 104 x 38.5mm metal box.

The 144 x 32 dot matrix LCD module provides an 18 x 2 English text display for human and machine interface, while a Din Rail mounting kit simplifies either wall or DIN Rail mounting of the Matrix-520.

Linux kernel version 2.6 serves as the Matrix-520's open and powerful development platform, matched with a journaling flash file system (JFFS2), a handy busybox utility collection, and secure network utilities including SSH, SCP, and the popular boa web server.

This Linux package provides everything necessary for many embedded applications.

The Matrix-520 is shipped with the GNU tool chain, which includes a C/C++ cross compiler and Glibc.

With this tool chain, users can develop their application software using an x86-based computer, then download and run their application software on the Matrix-520.

Powerful communication functions, plus reliable hardware and software architecture make the Matrix-520 ready for numerous industrial and building automation applications.

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