Pixus Technologies
Waterloo, Ontario N2V 2C5 info@pixustechnologies.com
519-885-5775
http://www.pixustechnologies.com/

Pixus releases conduction-cooled version of OpenVPX chassis manager - Press Release
January 28, 2021Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, now offers a conduction-cooled model for their 3U OpenVPX Chassis Manager.
Pixus Offers Versatile Alarm Card for Fan and Voltage Monitoring and Control - Press Release
January 18, 2021Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, offers an alarm card that can be used in various OpenVPX, VME/VME64x, CompactPCI, cPCI Serial and other open standard architecture chassis platforms.
Pixus Develops OpenVPX Chassis Platform Supporting Speeds in Excess of 100GbE and 2500W of Cooling - Press Release
January 05, 2021Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, has provided the fastest known customized OpenVPX backplane/chassis design in the market.
Pixus Technologies Offers Customization Services for Chassis Panels & Doors - Press Release
December 14, 2020Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, is providing customized solutions for it’s enclosure paneling for 3U and 6U OpenVPX and other Eurocard-based systems.
Pixus Announces New Horizontal-mount OpenVPX Backplanes - Press Release
November 03, 2020Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, has announced new OpenVPX backplanes designed for horizontal-mount enclosures.
New 3U OpenVPX Backplanes in VITA 65 and VITA 66.4 Optical Formats - Press Release
September 16, 2020Pixus Technologies, a provider of embedded computing and enclosure solutions, has announced new 3U OpenVPX backplane designs in multiple configurations. Pixus has developed OpenVPX backplanes utilizing the BKP3-CEN07-15.2.3 VITA 65 profile. The 7-slot backplane is standardly designed to PCIe Gen3 speeds with options for higher levels.
Expanding software-defined radio versatility for the digital battlefield - Story
September 14, 2020By Haydn Nelson, NI and Justin Moll, Pixus Technologies
On the increasingly connected battlefield, the electromagnetic spectrum is a critical resource that can mean the difference between victory and defeat. In recent conflicts, simply geolocating the source of enemy communications signals gave a competitive advantage to the victor. On the battlefield, software-defined radio (SDR) is used for sensors, communications, and electronic warfare – in short, it’s almost everywhere. SDR’s single-technology architecture and reprogrammable nature make it ideal for a broad range of applications.