The nanoX-AL is a COM Express® COM.0 R3.0 Type 10 module supporting Intel Atom® processor E3900 series system-on-chip (SoC).
The nanoX-AL is specifically designed for customers who need optmized processing and graphics performance with low power consumption
in a long product life solution.
The nanoX-AL features the dual/quad core Intel Atom® processor E3900 series supporting non-ECC type DDR3L single-channel or dualchannel
memory at 1600/1867 MHz to provide excellent overall performance. Integrated IntelR Gen9 LP Graphics includes features such as
OpenGL 4.3, DirectX 12, OpenCL 2.0 and support for H.265/HEVC, H.264, MPEG2, VC1, VP9, MVC, JPEG/MJPEG hardware decode.
Graphics outputs include DDI ports supporting HDMI/DVI/DisplayPort and single-channel 18/24-bit LVDS (eDP by build option). The nanoXAL
is specifically designed for customers with balanced performance and power consumption requirements who want to outsource the
custom core logic of their systems for reduced development time.
The nanoX-AL has soldered type non-ECC DDR3L memory up to 8GB. In addition, onboard eMMC memory (8GB/16GB/32GB) and SD
signals are available as build options.
The nanoX-AL features a single onboard Gigabit Ethernet port, USB 3.0 ports and USB 2.0 ports, and SATA 6 Gb/s ports. Support is
provided for SMBus and I2C. The module is equipped with SPI AMI EFI BIOS, supporting embedded features such as remote console,
CMOS backup, hardware monitor, and watchdog timer.
At the heart of SEMA is the Board Management Controller (BMC) supporting SEMA functions. The SEMA Extended EAPI provides access to all functions and can be integrated into the user’s own applications. The SEMA GUI and SEMA Command Line Interface allow monitoring, control and use of the SEMA parameters and functions directly on your device for test and demonstration purposes.Optionally SEMA supports also remote procedure calls – please refer to SEMA Software Installation Guide.
Detailed forensic information is available after system or module failures. The BMC Power-Up Error Log function provides detailed information about history of failures that may have occurred during power-up sequences. Log information includes e.g. error number, flags, restart event, power cycles, boot count, status, CPU temperature and board temperature. Moreover minimum and maximum temperature of the CPU and system is available, as well as HDD S.M.A.R.T information- all of which can be used to analyze system or module failure in detail.
SEMA is available for Linux and Windows operating systems and for various HW platforms.