Military Embedded Systems

Company Directory

Extreme Engineering Solutions (X-ES)

9901 Silicon Prairie Parkway
Verona, Wisconsin 53593
[email protected]
https://www.xes-inc.com/
Extreme Engineering Solutions (X-ES)
Articles related to Extreme Engineering Solutions (X-ES)
Radar/EW

New 6U OpenVPX-compliant board with Freescale processors released by X-ES - News

November 30, 2012
MIDDLETON, WI. Engineers at Extreme Engineering Solutions, Inc. (X-ES) released a new 6U VPX Single Board Computer (SBC) -- the XCalibur1641 -- that supports Freescale QorIQ P3041, P4040, P4080, P5010, P5020, and P5040 processors. The OpenVPX-compliant device is targeted at conduction-cooled and air-cooled military applications.
Radar/EW

JITC-certified Rugged SBC, XPedite7332 - News

August 23, 2012
XPedite 7332 from X-ES is a rugged 3U CompactPCI Single Board Computer (SBC) for secure military applications.
Comms

Rugged small form factor router running Cisco IOS released by X-ES - News

May 15, 2012
MIDDLETON, Wis. Cisco officials selected Extreme Engineering Solutions (X-ES) to host the Cisco IOS IP Routing software on the X-ES SFFR, a rugged small form factor router. The router enables mobile ad hoc networking for military and emergency response applications.
Radar/EW

VPX/VITA 62 power supply enlivens mil systems - Product

April 18, 2012
While the burgeoning VPX (VITA 46) VITA-spawned form factor is taking the military embedded realm by storm, an optimal power supply ensures optimal performance and reliability. Enter the VITA 62 Power Supply standard, which defines a power supply geared for VPX chassis while meeting rugged...
Radar/EW

Rhetoric heats up over Small Form Factors (SFF) - Blog

April 10, 2012
The debate over Small Form Factor (SFF) design standards is escalating but also becoming entertaining with different views coming from both sides of the Atlantic on how to create SFF designs. Demand for these designs in military C4ISR systems is increasing, but system integrators don?t want to get locked into proprietary solutions. So, embedded computing companies are looking at how they can satisfy this demand as well as the need for lower Size, Weight, and Power (SWaP).