The Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF) has kicked off a new 100G project titled "VSR 28G Common Electrical Chip-to- Module Interface" which will support the use of less complex, lower power 100G optical modules.
The work will establish a very short reach chip-to-module electrical interface to enable 100G optical modules that do not implement full retiming in the module.
The new project will result in an implementation agreement that will define data lane(s) that support bit rates up to 28 Gbps for chip-to-module interfaces with distances from zero to a minimum of 100 mm on a host PCB. The project will also define the channel model based on a chip-to-module application as well as define a test methodology for a chip-to-module interface including a single connector.
"This implementation agreement will allow lower power, smaller form factor multi-source 100G optical modules to be developed that will increase face-plate port density," said David Stauffer, of IBM and the OIF's Physical and Link Layer Working Group chair. "This will further the integration, power reduction and cost reduction of 100 Gbps line cards."http://www.oiforum.com
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
OIF Starts 100G Work on Chip-to-Module
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
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