From a new Korean startup call XSLAB (I think). Product page: XSLAB (Initially loads in Korean, but you can change to English at the top)
Their demo just popped up in my youtube feed, and I'm trying to get more info from the company, though my Korean is virtually non-existant (I can pretty much order food, and get back home at the end of the night if I need to.) I'm trying to find out availability, cost, and what ARM cores they use - they don't have a datasheet anywhere on their site.
It looks like it's 32 ARM based SOMs connected via an internal PCIe fabric to a controller; however each node gets its own NIC so I'm guessing it designed to be addressed via IP rather than PCIe (maybe PCIe is only for power and monitoring). The SOMs look like they're 24 core, 16GB memory, 250GB disk drive and draw 15W (at least according to their web page)
Did anyone see their stuff at any of the conferences this summer, or heard anything about these guys?
Not sure if they're still in prototype or if they're going into production.
It reminds me a lot of UptimeLab's Rasberry Pi blades...
Would be ideal for clustered event driven workloads like a web service that are very parallelizable and don't require alot of horsepower per request.
Also the Youtube presentation video :
Their demo just popped up in my youtube feed, and I'm trying to get more info from the company, though my Korean is virtually non-existant (I can pretty much order food, and get back home at the end of the night if I need to.) I'm trying to find out availability, cost, and what ARM cores they use - they don't have a datasheet anywhere on their site.
It looks like it's 32 ARM based SOMs connected via an internal PCIe fabric to a controller; however each node gets its own NIC so I'm guessing it designed to be addressed via IP rather than PCIe (maybe PCIe is only for power and monitoring). The SOMs look like they're 24 core, 16GB memory, 250GB disk drive and draw 15W (at least according to their web page)
Did anyone see their stuff at any of the conferences this summer, or heard anything about these guys?
Not sure if they're still in prototype or if they're going into production.
It reminds me a lot of UptimeLab's Rasberry Pi blades...
Would be ideal for clustered event driven workloads like a web service that are very parallelizable and don't require alot of horsepower per request.
Also the Youtube presentation video :