Re: HARDWARE: Open-Source-Friendly Graphics Cards -- Viable?

From: Timothy Miller
Date: Thu Oct 21 2004 - 09:52:55 EST




Jim Nelson wrote:
Timothy Miller wrote:

I can produce more detail later, but first, some characteristics and advantages of what I'm proposing:

- x86 BIOS/OpenBoot/OpenFirmware code under BSD and GPL license
- kernel drivers under BSD and GPL license
- X11 module under MIT license
- flashable PROM so that boot code can be added for more platforms
- usable as the console on any platform that can take a PCI, AGP, or PCI-Express card
- downloadable schematic for the circuit board
- FPGA-based graphics engine so it's reprogrammable
- instructions on how to reprogram the FPGA, so it's hackable
- if we discontinue a product, we may release the Verilog code for the FPGA
- Since this is designed to be open-source-friendly, we want to play by the rules of the open-source community.
- Tech Source would actively participate in the development and maintenance of our own drivers.
- We will actually pay attention to problems and concerns raised by users and developers.
- We won't be control-freaks.


I haven't worked out a complete design spec for this product. The reason is that what we think people want and what people REALLY want may not be congruent. If you have a good idea for a piece of graphics hardware which you think would be beneficial to the free software community (and worth it for a company to produce), then Tech Source, as a graphics company, might be willing to sell it.



You might want to take a look at the onboard video market. Providing an open-source 2D rendering engine and the PCI glue logic that work on an FPGA would probably revolutionize embedded PC applicatiuons that rely on a graphical interface. Providing support to motherboard manufaturers who might want a low-cost onboard video solution (micro-ITX, etc) is another possibility.

Now, THIS is an excellent idea. If the volumes there would be high enough, it could be what justifies the project. We have had customers wanting embedded solutions, and through this project, we could provide them something even better in the future.

You also might want to look at PC/104 and CompactPCI form factors - I think the industrial market will be a great target, and, after all, if you have to move 80% industrial equipment to justify the 20% AGP sales, it makes good sense. There might even be a market for ISA, SBus, and MCA cards, for people stuck supporting seriously old machines (386, 486, SPARC) where it's almost impossible to find working graphics cards. Even if it's a DOS machine, hardware is hardware, and a brand-new VL-bus card for someone's 486 would be pretty cool :)

This is a good idea too. I've already decided to try to fit it onto a 1/2 height, short PCI card (like the low-end 3ware cards) so that you can put the card into one of these compact cases.

At this time, I'm not sure it's worth it to do anything other than PCI, AGP, and PCIE, however. Of course, if someone comes along with a large enough order, we'd be plenty willing to do whatever customization they want.

Force of will isn't going to get this project done. Money is what matters here. <sigh> :)

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