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Intel’s MXC sounds like it’s a brand new system, consisting of a new MXC connector that replaces RJ45 (the socket used by the Ethernet ports on the back of your wireless router) and small form-factor pluggable transceivers (SFP) — and a new fiber technology called Corning ClearCurve LW. The abstract on the IDF website says that Intel has been working with Corning on MXC for two years, with Intel bringing its expertise in silicon photonics and Corning focusing on the new fiber. There is very little information about the connector/interface, other than it’s smaller than RJ45 and SFP, and that the connector can carry up to 1.6 terabits per second (Tbps).
To put this into perspective, the current top-end networking standards are 40GbE and 100GbE, which support 40Gbps and 100Gbps respectively. The IEEE is currently working on a standard for 400 Gigabit Ethernet
(GbE), which is due to be ratified around 2017. From the IDF abstract, it sounds like MXC is all about the underlying link technology — the connector, the cabling, the transceiver — while something like 400GbE would actually manage the signaling and data transfer over that link.
When it comes to fiber-optic networking, Intel isn’t the first company that springs to mind — usually it’s IBM, Cisco, or one of the supercomputer makers like Cray. Way back in 2010, though, we wrote a story about Intel’s silicon photonics R&D department creating chips capable of 50Gbps, with the potential to scale up to 1Tbps — and now, three years later, it seems Intel has produced a transceiver that’s capable of even faster operation. Perhaps more famously, the silicon photonics lab also produced Light Peak — an optical interconnect that started at 10Gbps per channel, but which could scale up to 100Gbps. For a variety of reasons, though, Light Peak never made it to market and instead we got a copper-wire version called Thunderbolt — and even with the revised version (Thunderbolt 2) coming to market later in 2013, it’s still stuck at 10Gbps.
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