HARDWARE FEATURES
- Ultra-Small 6”x 4”x 1” and 1lb.
- 4.7GHz 8 Core Intel® XEON™ W CPU
- 128GB DDR4 RAM w/ECC
- Native High-Performance 16TB SSD
- 4x ThunderBolt™ 4 ports
- Shock, Temperature and Tamper Sensors
- Single +20VDC Power Operation
- Extended Temp -10° to +55° C
- Sealed for IP65 Rating
AUSA 2025, Washington, D.C, October 13, 2025—General Micro Systems (GMS), the world’s leading technology-independent supplier of computing engines in boxes, boards and servers, today announced the value-priced X7 RAPTOR™ mission computer. At a mere 1” high and 4” wide and intended for sale for under $10,000 in capable rugged configurations, X7’s streamlined feature set allows the deployable edge computer to have the best size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C) of any rugged computer on the market. The price point reflects a value-oriented feature set for specific high-volume battlefield applications such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), manpack/wearables, and unmanned aerial systems (UAS).
AUSA 2025, Washington DC, October 13, 2025— General Micro Systems (GMS) today announced the latest offerings in the XDomain family of three open standard cross domain systems (CDS) at AUSA 2025, booth #8407. Designed to be small, lightest weight, standards-based and low cost, the cross domain systems perform dual duty as they secure data at rest and in motion by separating Red domains from Black domains, while simultaneously bringing highest performance mission, sensor and payload processing functions into the CDSs themselves. Using MOSA-standard Ethernet and Thunderbolt™ 4, they are complete systems, not merely cross domain solutions, that can significantly save size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C).
AUSA 2025, Washington, D.C, October 13, 2025—General Micro Systems (GMS), the world’s leading technology-independent supplier of computing engines in boxes, boards and servers, today announced the value-priced X7 RAPTOR™ mission computer. At a mere 1” high and 4” wide and intended for sale for under $10,000 in capable rugged configurations, X7’s streamlined feature set allows the deployable edge computer to have the best size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C) of any rugged computer on the market. The price point reflects a value-oriented feature set for specific high-volume battlefield applications such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), manpack/wearables, and unmanned aerial systems (UAS).
AUSA 2025, Washington DC, October 13, 2025— General Micro Systems (GMS) today announced the latest offerings in the XDomain family of three open standard cross domain systems (CDS) at AUSA 2025, booth #8407. Designed to be small, lightest weight, standards-based and low cost, the cross domain systems perform dual duty as they secure data at rest and in motion by separating Red domains from Black domains, while simultaneously bringing highest performance mission, sensor and payload processing functions into the CDSs themselves. Using MOSA-standard Ethernet and Thunderbolt™ 4, they are complete systems, not merely cross domain solutions, that can significantly save size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C).
Different from multi-domain Red/Black systems, cross-domain systems (CDS) provide the gateway between highly secure, classified systems and insecure—often public—systems and networks. They offer higher levels of security than multi-domain, such as via data diodes for rules-based routing, and beefier crypto and sanitization for data-at-rest within storage devices. GMS has just announced four new systems: an airborne 3-domain CDS, two ground-based CDS systems, and a ¼ ATR OpenVPX-based CDS. Each CDS is based on the X9 distributed computing architecture.
GMS Assures Highly Secure Gigabit Battlefield Communications Between Secure, Classified and Insecure Comms Links with Four New Customizable Cross Domain Systems (CDS)
General Micro Systems (GMS) today announced four cross-domain systems (CDS), the culmination of decades of system-level experience with increasingly complex and secure systems. A recognized expert in defense communications, sensor processing, and data recorder systems, GMS brings it all together with these four new systems: an airborne 3-domain CDS, two ground-based CDS systems, and a ¼ ATR OpenVPX-based CDS. Each CDS is based on the X9 distributed computing architecture and delivers mission processing, secure storage and authentication, encryption, networking, and options for SATCOM, AI and data diodes.
The X9 SPIDER modular, scalable, distributed architecture simplifies applications that require rugged high-performance computing, high-definition video, sensor processing, artificial intelligence (AI) battlefield edge processing, storage, display, and I/O in a small, rugged enclosure. X9 SPIDER is modular, expandable or scalable, with Thunderbolt™ 4 technology and our patented LightBolt™ 40Gbps connections in copper or fiber, with optional 100W per port power for up-/down-stream sensors and system expansion.
Thunderbolt™ 4 is the fundamental connectivity architecture employed in GMS’s X9 SPIDER family of small form factor rugged modules and displays.
All modern computers have at least one USB port. USB shines because of its fast data transfers – up to 40 Gbps with USB4®.
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The USB Type-C™ connector is supported by many devices. A major advantage is that the Type-C connector goes beyond traditional USB by supporting a variety of protocols using “alternate modes”. Read more...
A full line up of OpenVPX compute and support modules developed in alignment with the SOSA™ technical standard.
OpenVPX chassis for high performance applications that require massive power/heat dissipation, with provisions for extensive copper, fiber, and RF I/O.
The World's Most Powerful Full-featured Wearable Computer for real-time tip-of-spear image and sensor processing.
All General Micro Systems, Inc. products are proudly designed and manufactured in the U.S.A. GMS servers are unique in the fact that we have developed our own server motherboards from the ground up and do not use any "off-the-shelf" internal components like our competition.
Ready for the Future Battlefield - Artificial Intelligence
The future battlefield will place reliance on artificial intelligence as a means to not only offload warfighter workload, but to improve the odds in our favor by using computers to think, act, and improve lethality. GMS’s optional modular graphics accelerator engines use GPGPUs (general purpose graphics processing unit) that perform AI and vector processing.
These engines are capable of performing extreme video, vector, data mining, augmented reality and algorithm processing. These capabilities might be exceptionally useful when taking incoming high resolution sensor video information by performing automatic target identification, recognition, IFF (identification friend or foe), DVE (degraded visual environment) or other massive data set processing with image processing/enhancement. In small form factor (SFF) systems, GMS believes the IGP (Intel) embedded processing built into most of our systems can be supplemented by optional modular graphics accelerators to provide an unheard of video and sensor processing in an industry-leading small size package.
Since its inception in 1979, General Micro Systems, Inc. (GMS) has been true to its mission statement: To Become the World’s Leading Technology Independent Supplier of Computing Engines, while Providing the Best Price/Performance, Quality and Customer Support, Demanded by Our Current and Our Future Customers.
All GMS products are proudly designed and manufactured in the U.S.A.
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