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News mLogic mLink bridges PCI Express and Thunderbolt

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by brumgrunt, 16 Apr 2012.

  1. brumgrunt

    brumgrunt What's a Dremel?

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  2. Guinevere

    Guinevere Mega Mom

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    Given that Bit-Tech doesn't have a history of reviewing products designed for professionals, and that this mLogic device is not the only example of this type of devices I wonder why you've chosen to put up an article about it? And why you've chosen to put such emphasis on the units price without the slightest mention of comparable products and their prices? As an example on a 'comparable' product, the Magma 3T is $980.

    It's a pro-device aimed at pro users with specific needs. It's got very little (Nothing?) to do with your normal subject matter. So while I herald the aim to break into new areas I question the logic in jumping in with such an isolated and negatively pitched article.
     
  3. Cei

    Cei pew pew pew

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    Intel need to hurry up and get Thunderbolt embedded in PC motherboards as well as Macs.
     
  4. Cyberpower-UK

    Cyberpower-UK Professional Overclocker

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    So when are PCi-E cards featuring Thunder-Bolt/Light-Peak controllers coming to market so we mortals (non-Apple users) can use it?

    Are Intel holding it back for the inevitable Ivy-Bridge-E motherboard refresh or have Apple tied their hands for a few years of exclusivity?
     
  5. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    It took me a little while to get my head around what this device actually does: turns a PCI-E device into an external device accessible by Thunderbolt. So... What this means for Macbook users is that they get access to hardware that their machines don't have the slot for, and means...erm... nothing really for PC laptop users whose machines likely already have the required slot for the device in question, thus negating the need for a Thunderbolt port that they don't have in the first place...

    Wouldn't there be massive OS X driver issues with this? If Thunderbolt is an interface port, surely you still need drivers for the actual device that you want to use? (Much like USB) My own experience of Hackintoshes and using PC hardware with OS X leads me to believe that there will be few official drivers available - if any - meaning that this would enjoy very little support outside of a few niche areas.
     
  6. Cei

    Cei pew pew pew

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    Apparently there's a new revision of Thunderbolt due any day now, which is open access to anybody (and the controllers are cheaper as well). I'd hope it'll be on PCs within 6 months to a year.

    PC laptops have full size PCIe slots to fit in a desktop GPU? Wasn't aware of that...

    Drives could well be an issue. Some GPUs are supported by OS X with a driver update (namely NVIDIA cards), whilst others would need new ones to be written (namely AMD cards). Any other kind of device would also need drivers of some flavour (but then people who make RAID cards etc have been doing this for years).
     
  7. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    When I first read the article, I assumed it took Mini PCI-E cards and/or ExpressCards. It wasn't until I found a larger version of the photo, showing that what I assumed to be an ExpressCard is actually an SSD, that I realised otherwise. I wasn't aware that you can get storage devices with a PCI-E interface; I had assumed that SATA (or real high-end stuff like SCSI, fibre-channel, etc) was standard...

    The more I think about it, the more I keep coming back to this post:

    This is a *really* niche product... You can indeed use most Nvidia GPUs natively on OS X, but if you're talking about AN Other PC PCI-E card, then it's going to need custom drivers. Chances are that most manufacturers aren't going to provide that for such a limited use case.
     
  8. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    Sure, it's a niche product - but it's also interesting, no? Well, *I* found it interesting. As laptops - and I mean "laptops-that-aren't-the-MacBook-Pro" here - begin to hit the streets with Thunderbolt built-in, these or similar devices could prove extremely useful. At least, once the price goes down.

    Bear in mind we've also covered such gems as Intel's Internet of Things Joint Lab, Snapdragon-based laptops, Microsoft's Project HomeOS, the Tricorder Project, and an ATmega that can run Linux - every single one of which I would argue is more 'niche' than a PCIe-to-Thunderbolt bridge.

    I may, however, be biased: I have a PCMCIA-to-PCI bridge in the back of my PC as I type...
     
  9. Cei

    Cei pew pew pew

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    PCIe SSDs are usually seen in the enterprise world. Way better performance than the ones we use, and higher capacities...and cost!

    As previously stated, manufacturers have been making OS X drivers for PCIe cards of various kinds for years now (Mac Pros have got them), don't see why they would stop. The product in this case isn't going to need drivers, as it will be invisible to the computer, so it's just driving the end device in the PCIe slot.

    I do agree it is a bit niche though, not exactly much demand...
     
  10. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    I wasn't trying to criticise the inclusion as a news story, just that it took me a while to get my head around what it actually does and what goes in it... Besides, some of the other stories you mentioned are pretty cool so it doesn't matter that they're niche! :D

    Don't doubt that many PCI-E (I keep trying to type PCE damnit) cards exist for Mac, with full software support. But the market for Mac Pro's is still relatively limited, never mind PCI-E expansion cards supplied with OS X drivers or native OS X support. Please don't misinterpret this as a Mac vs PC thing though; I got over that p***ing contest years ago and I'm not trying to slight either platform. My point is more that many manufacturers don't even release Linux drivers and, outside of hardware that's already designed with OS X in mind, it wouldn't be any better for generic hardware under OS X. That doesn't make it a bad product, it just limits its utility.

    I am curious regarding what you mention regarding not needing drivers, though... Do you mean that the mLink chassis itself does not require drivers (which is what I would assume) or that the PCI-E card in the chassis would not need drivers?
     
  11. Guinevere

    Guinevere Mega Mom

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  12. Taniniver

    Taniniver Minimodder

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    I think it's worthwhile story certainly. Whilst this particular implementation is somewhat marred by the lack of support for full size cards (and to some degree the price), the technology itself is very interesting. Imagine a situation where you take your laptop home, and connect it via Thunderbolt (yeah, I know, not exactly widely adopted yet...) to a box like this running a nice powerful desktop graphics card, for driving your big monitor for games.
     
  13. Cei

    Cei pew pew pew

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    This is exactly what Sony did with their Z series laptops not long ago - the laptop only had integrated graphics, but the Thunderbolt connected unit held a BD burner and a discrete 6 series Radeon, with appropriate outputs. It's what Thunderbolt was designed for, but is just taking forever to get anywhere!
     
  14. Taniniver

    Taniniver Minimodder

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    What I would hope for this though is to make it much more generic - not just a specific box sold for use with a specific series of laptop, but just "it's a box, put whatever graphics card you like in it, use whatever Thunderbolt laptop you like".
     
  15. Guinevere

    Guinevere Mega Mom

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    But... As you say this box won't do full size GPUs (it's not designed for that). The full size Thunderbolt PCI-E enclosures are more expensive... and announced a long time ago... and don't have the power requirements for a high end GPU... and the thunderbolt ports won't let you drive a GPU at full speed anyway. It's all currently tech for professional mac users.

    This is tech designed and marketing for a specific niche in the industry. Yes one day it might allow you to hang a huge PCI-E of your Ultrabook / Macbook Air but not yet and not really even being talked about on product roadmaps.

    This wasn't an article talking about the future possibilities of external devices replacing internal (We all do that to some extent with external drives these days). No it was a mini-moan about high priced the product was.

    Thunderbolt is a tech that's growing all the time, but it's being adopted in a different sector. Take the new Blackmagic Cinema Camera, the first camera to come equipped with a thunderbolt port. 2.5k 12bit Raw video for $3000. Yes it'll really work well ATM with a Mac but do you think the pros care about that? They want it to work that way.
     
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