Chapter 2 product overview, Ebx architecture, Chapter 2 – Ampro Corporation Single Board Computer Littleboard 550 User Manual

Page 11: Product overview

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LittleBoard 550

Reference Manual

5

Chapter 2

Product Overview

This introduction presents general information about the EBX Architecture and the LittleBoard 550
single board computer (SBC). After reading this chapter you should understand:

• EBX Architecture
• LittleBoard 550 architecture
• LittleBoard 550 features
• Major components
• Connectors
• Specifications

EBX Architecture

The “Embedded Board, eXpandable” (EBX) standard is the result of a collaboration between industry
leaders, Motorola and Ampro, to unify the embedded computing industry on a small footprint embedded
single-board computer (SBC) standard. The EBX standard principally defines physical size, mounting
hole pattern, and power connector locations. It does not specify processor type or electrical
characteristics. There are recommended connector placements for serial/parallel, Ethernet, graphics, and
memory expansion, including an optional location for PC Card (PCMCIA) expansion.

Derived from the Ampro LittleBoard

™ form-factor originated in 1984, EBX combines a standard

footprint with open interfaces. The EBX form-factor is small enough for deeply embedded applications,
yet large enough to contain the functions of a full embedded SBC (single board computer) including
CPU, memory, mass storage interfaces, display controller, serial/parallel ports, today’s advanced
operating systems, and other system functions. This embedded SBC standard ensures that embedded
system OEMs can standardize their designs and that embedded computing solutions can be designed into
space constrained environments with off-the-shelf components.

The EBX standard boasts highly flexible and adaptable system expansion, allowing easy and modular
addition of functions such as USB 2.0, Firewire or wireless networking not usually contained in standard
product offerings. The EBX system expansion is based on popular existing industry standards,
PC/10

4™ and PC/104-Plus

. PC/104 places the ISA bus on compact 3.6” x 3.8” modules with self-

stacking capability. PC/104-Plus adds the power of a PCI bus to PC/104 while retaining the basic form-
factor. Using PC/104 expansion cards, the PCMCIA standard offers access to PC Cards from the mobile
and handheld computing markets.

The EBX standard integrates all these off-the-shelf standards into a highly embeddable SBC form-factor.
EBX supports the legacy of PC/104, hosting the wide variety of embedded system oriented expansion
modules from hundreds of companies worldwide. PCMCIA brings the advantages of the latest portable
and mobile system expansion technologies to embedded applications. Additionally, the EBX PCI
infrastructure and PC/104-Plus expansion bus offer true processor independence and high performance
standards-based system expansion. See Figure 2-1.

The EBX standard also brings stability to the embedded board market and offers OEMs assurance that a
wide range of products will be available from multiple sources – now and in the future. The EBX
standard is open to continuing technology advancements, since it is both processor and payload
independent. It creates opportunity for economies of scale in chassis, power supply, and peripheral
devices.

The EBX specification is freely available to all interested companies, and may be used without licenses
or royalties. For further technical information on the EBX standard, go to the Ampro web site at

www.ampro.com,

or to the PC/104 Consortium web site at

www.pc104.org.

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