[time-nuts] single board PCs

Bob Camp lists at rtty.us
Mon Jan 7 12:30:47 UTC 2013


HI

Well if you are getting it done in seconds on Matlab, then you likely don't need Matlab very badly. Around here a typical Matlab setup is indeed CPU bound for a *lot* longer than that during a normal work day. Two or three hours a day is not at all unusual. 

Bob
 
On Jan 6, 2013, at 11:21 PM, Jim Lux <jimlux at earthlink.net> wrote:

> On 1/6/13 6:09 PM, Bob Camp wrote:
>> Hi
>> 
>> Ummm, errrrr you want to run Matlab and you are likely paying $100 an
>> hour to whom ever is waiting on the machine. My *guess* is that a
>> micro board of what ever flavor will do an arbitrary Matlab run in
>> maybe 30 days.
> Yes.
> But any of a zillion PC clones will do it "fast enough".  Think of all those Tek and Agilent boxes with a embedded PC.. what do they have inside?
> 
> That same run would take something large about 30
>> minutes.
> 
> Nahh.. seconds on slow laptop, seconds on a desktop PC. Matlab isn't all that slow.
> 
> That of course assumes you can even get Matlab to load on
>> something small.
> 
> It doesn't have to be "small".. except physically. That's really what I'm looking for. Physically small (mini ITX sort of form factor, or, for that matter, laptop formfactor), but able to procured as an OEM sort of widget (e.g. I assume Tek and Agilent aren't designing their own mobos to stick in the back of an oscilloscope or VNA.. so what ARE they shoving in there)
> 
> 
> 
>> 
>> An Ivy Bridge based PC with multiple cores can be built up for less
>> than $800 in a fairly small package. It won't be single board, but it
>> will be small. Not the fastest system on the planet, but pretty fast.
>> You'll be paying a significant chunk of that for the Windows license.
>> The cost of the Matlab license will be well above the cost of the
>> entire system (unless you have some sort of crazy deal going).
> 
> yep.. but a kilobuck for a Matlab license is just a couple day's time for an engineer using it.
> 
> Think of that nice Agilent PNA.. clearly it has some sort of small form factor PC mobo inside... so what are they using?
> 
>> 
>> Put another way, you'll pay for the more expensive hardware in the
>> first week of use - why cheap out?
> 
> 
> Precisely.. but I'd just as soon not be in the PC integration business, finding boards to plug into a mobo, etc. I was wondering what folks have used (or seen used) in this sort of usage model.
> 
>> 
> 
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