Friday, March 16th 2012
Thunderbolt To Become Standard for PC in 2013, Optical at That
Towards the end of 2012, Intel will alter Thunderbolt specification from a copper wire-based interconnect to a fiber-optic or photonic interconnect. An analysis by DigiTimes which takes into account information by industry sources, states that Thunderbolt will become standard for PCs only in 2013, and that too the optical one. This comes even as copper wire-based Thunderbolt is beginning to feature on some high-end socket LGA1155 motherboards based on Intel 7-series chipset.
Thunderbolt will get its big push in 2013, when the port will be standard on mainstream desktops and notebooks by OEM majors such as Lenovo, and several PC motherboard vendors, such as ASUS. The optical Thunderbolt IO, apart from allowing greater cable-lengths than 6 m (a limitation of copper-wire Thunderbolt), could push bandwidth greater than 10 Gbps, as a possible incentive for the industry to facilitate the transition to the optical variant.
Source:
DigiTimes
Thunderbolt will get its big push in 2013, when the port will be standard on mainstream desktops and notebooks by OEM majors such as Lenovo, and several PC motherboard vendors, such as ASUS. The optical Thunderbolt IO, apart from allowing greater cable-lengths than 6 m (a limitation of copper-wire Thunderbolt), could push bandwidth greater than 10 Gbps, as a possible incentive for the industry to facilitate the transition to the optical variant.
28 Comments on Thunderbolt To Become Standard for PC in 2013, Optical at That
Seems like AMD users aren't going to have the luxury of Thunderbolt unless mobo manufacturers incorporate it, at a premium of course due to the reasons that R_1 stated, or they get an add-in card to add that functionality.
Also, "Firewire".
Who knows, but its clear that even Thunderbolts release on LGA1155 hardware will be limited to the higher-end of the spectrum. So clearly its not cheap. This quasi exclusive nature may attribute to retarding its growth in the market. This could keep peripherals limited in number and relatively expensive,…unlike USB.
As for AMD, apparently AMD is working something they call “Lightning Bolt”,….the poor mans Thunderbolt:
www.anandtech.com/show/5413/amds-lightning-bolt-low-cost-thunderbolt-alternative-for-usb-30dp
Lightning Bolt is not optical and basically just extends the DisplayPort packet structure.
Lightningbolt at least makes sense.
Got a feeling TB is gonna turn into the Bluray of cabling. With USB3 and then 4 coming...I'm sure TB will have it's place but I don't expect it to become anything more than Firewire was. The major standards like USB will still dominate for awhile.
I would think that good QOS prioritization would eliminate a lot of issues with devices becoming starved for bandwidth (if it's even needed).
The Thunderbolt implementation in Apple products likely used mini-DP connectors because it's cheap (and Apple probably demanded it). The mini-DP connectors are not likely to work for the optical implementation without substantially increasing the price of the cables. Video cards, NICs, etc. all share the PCI Express bus. If you are aiming to combine their outputs, you need a separate bus for that. No PC hardware available now is intended to do that. As far as I know, PCI Express bus isn't even capable of those changes without a serious overhaul.
I'm not saying it couldn't be done with smartphones and other low bandwidth devices but it is extremely unlikely to happen any time soon with laptops, desktops, workstations, nor servers.
I envision all peripheral cards losing their card slot pins and plugging direcly into fiber channels on the mobo. Their outputs would then be fed to some kind of fiber multiplexers for a single output from the case.
If the in-die optical switching technology ever goes mainstream, it would be kind of silly not to use fiber for all I/O also.
No, it's not going to happen anytime soon.