All Access


VME embedded computer industry buries the hatchet over VITA 46 VPX standard ... for now

By John Keller
Posted by John Keller

Cooler heads apparently have prevailed in the VME embedded computer industry in a dispute over how to ensure interoperability of VME bus technology pertaining to the VITA 46 VPX industry standard for high-speed serial interconnects in high-performance military, aerospace, and commercial embedded computing .

I had openly been fretting over a rift in the VPX standard groups that had threatened to tear the VME bus community apart. Apparently this VPX dispute has been settled , and it's none too soon. I'm frankly relieved to see tensions subside; I've been following the VMEbus industry for a long time -- 20 years, in fact -- and I have a lot of friends and acquaintances here for whom I have respect and affection. I just didn't want to see things get ugly, and I think we were headed down that road.

The fight erupted last January when several VME card providers founded the OpenVPX Industry Working Group to formulate interoperability standards for VPX-based systems. Their intentions -- on the surface, at least -- were sound because these companies wanted to hurry the standards process along to build momentum in the market, especially with prime defense contractors who are eager to use the technology, but are frustrated by the lack of interoperability standards.

There were two problems with how the OpenVPX group got started, however. First, the group was operating outside of the VITA industry trade association, which caught many in this industry by surprise, because VITA is the traditional place for creating VME-related standards. Second -- and much more damaging -- was the OpenVPX group's failure to invite some influential VPX providers.

By getting started on the wrong foot this way, the OpenVPX group initially hurt feelings and caused suspicion. Make no mistake; there's bad blood in this industry, and the way the OpenVPX group got started -- noble though its goals may have been -- just made things a lot worse.

Some companies thought the rightful place to formulate VPX interoperability standards should have been VITA. The OpenVPX members thought VITA was too slow, too engineering-centric, and was not well structured to deal with business and time-to-market issues that they believed were core components of VPX interoperability problems.

Here's how members of the VME embedded computer industry set aside their differences: they created one industry organization that is masquerading as two organizations.

Within VITA, industry members created the VITA 65 working group. Meanwhile, the OpenVPX group invited everyone in the industry to join. The two organizations' goals and objectives are the same -- to come up with meaningful interoperability standards for VPX systems -- and all members have equal influence and voting privileges.

Next October, the OpenVPX group will dissolve, and all of its work transferred to the VITA 65 group, which will take it to the entire VITA membership for adoption. This sounds great, and I trust the goals will be achieved.

We have to remember something else, though. The old rivals in this industry are watching each other, perhaps more closely than they ever have. In the open, these companies are embracing with their right hands, but their left hands are clutching concealed daggers.

Easily post a comment below using your Linkedin, Twitter, Google or Facebook account.

Previous Blog Posts

Ron Mastro: an unforgettable figure in the aerospace and defense electronics industry

Tue Apr 23 07:45:00 CDT 2013

Mil & Aero Publisher Ernesto Burden unhurt after bombs hit today's Boston Marathon

Mon Apr 15 15:04:00 CDT 2013

After all those sleepless nights of worry, now we find the Pentagon's budget is actually UP?

Wed Apr 10 11:54:00 CDT 2013

Confederate surrender at Appomattox ended the American Civil War 148 years ago this month

Tue Apr 09 10:22:00 CDT 2013

Dear God, what more can the U.S. military ask from the poor letter C?

Fri Apr 05 10:23:00 CDT 2013

Saber rattling in North Korea: how dangerous are these threats?

Tue Apr 02 10:26:00 CDT 2013

At last, some good news; is our industry really ready for this?

Tue Mar 26 09:24:00 CDT 2013

Teledyne Technologies becoming major player in unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) sensors

Tue Mar 19 09:46:00 CDT 2013

Is sequestration killing aerospace and defense trade shows?

Thu Mar 14 11:27:00 CDT 2013

Nuclear ballistic missile technology remains a post-Cold-War defense priority

Tue Mar 12 09:22:00 CDT 2013

The sequester hits! Is everyone okay?

Tue Mar 05 09:46:00 CST 2013

The continuing drone war of low-tech vs. high-tech

Tue Feb 26 12:30:00 CST 2013

Prospects for high-performance embedded computing (HPEC) look brighter than ever before

Tue Feb 19 10:09:00 CST 2013

Self-sealing suction cups show promise for future robots

Mon Feb 11 11:32:00 CST 2013

Air Force moving forward with potential upgrades to PAVE PAWS, BMEWS, and PARCS missile-defense radar

Thu Feb 07 13:32:00 CST 2013

Cyberattacks carried out against media outlets

Mon Feb 04 15:49:00 CST 2013

Quest for the humvee-mounted mobile data center for the battlefield edge

Wed Jan 30 11:40:00 CST 2013

Dempsey worries about cyberattack, DoD makes plans to hire additional cybersecurity workers

Mon Jan 28 14:16:00 CST 2013

Defense industry will emerge from these hard times stronger than ever

Thu Jan 24 11:07:00 CST 2013

More on our favorite quadruped robot, the LS3

Mon Jan 21 14:09:00 CST 2013

Wave of aerospace and defense company acquisitions may be indication of things to come

Thu Jan 17 10:05:00 CST 2013

First the power grid, now banks under attack

Mon Jan 14 12:28:00 CST 2013

Hagel as defense secretary another indication the U.S. military budget is headed downward

Wed Jan 09 11:51:00 CST 2013

NSA's cybersecurity program to protect critical infrastructure revealed

Mon Jan 07 09:41:00 CST 2013

Fiscal-cliff negotiations reward defense industry with even more uncertainty

Thu Jan 03 10:31:00 CST 2013

The Aerospace & Defense Bloggers

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

Ernesto Burden is the publisher of PennWell’s Aerospace & Defense Media Group, including Military & Aerospace Electronics, Avionics Intelligence and Avionics Europe.  He’s a father of four, a runner, and an avid digital media enthusiast with a deep background in the intersection of media publishing, digital technology, and social media. He can be reached at ernestob@pennwell.com and on Twitter @aero_ernesto.

Courtney E. Howard, as executive editor, enjoys writing about all things electronics and avionics in PennWell’s burgeoning Aerospace and Defense Group, which encompasses Military & Aerospace Electronics, Avionics Intelligence, the Avionics Europe conference, and much more. She’s also a self-proclaimed social-media maven, mil-aero nerd, and avid avionics geek. Connect with Courtney at Courtney@Pennwell.com, @coho on Twitter, and on LinkedIn.

Mil & Aero Magazine

April 2013
Volume 24, Issue 4
file

Download Our Free Apps



iPhone

iPad

Android

Follow Us On...