Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

nilayshrugged
on 27 December 2019

This is why smart displays run Ubuntu Core


First impressions count, and making sure your users can see and interact with your product in a seamless way, means selecting the right smart display technology. Read on to find out what hardware features are needed to make a reliable smart display, and why smart displays run Ubuntu Core.

Medical imaging to smart displays: There’s a port for that

Earlier in December, our team was at the Advantech Partner Conference, where the recently released Advantech MIO-5373, was running Ubuntu Core. This device has the two main components any smart display needs: 1) The right ports to connect to screens and 2) compute to make sure screens look pretty. Let’s take a look at it’s cross section:

Future proof your device with an eDP 1.4 Port

This board can achieve 4K HD at 60 frames-per-second due to the eDP 1.4 port. Generally, industrial users are expecting 4K HD as a sign that a device is future proof. Specifically, this is essential for mission-critical use-cases, where real time data needs to be displayed and acted on. In either case, the MIO-5373 eDP 1.4 port has you covered.

If screen compatibility is essential, the eDP port is multiplexed with an LVDS port, which has better compatibility with older LCD displays. Further, there are DisplayPort and HDMI ports, and this ensures any screen made in the past 20 years can connect to the MIO-5373.

Users can power three dynamic and high definition displays while maintaining reliability and image quality

Where this device really impresses, though, is its 8th Generation Intel Processor and option for up to 32GB of RAM. With this level of compute, users can power three dynamic and high definition displays while maintaining reliability and image quality. For example, if user interaction needs to be gathered, e.g. from a touch screen, processed internally, and then results displayed on another, larger, monitor this board is a winner.

Why Advantech smart displays run Ubuntu Core

Catching up with Aaron Su, EIOT AVP at Advantech, at the Partner Conference, he said:

“The MIO-5373 integrates Ubuntu Core and snaps, which provides a ready to use Linux operating system for embedded customers. It reduces the burden for customer when building up an embedded Linux operating system, and allows customers to focus more on their application software development. In addition, Ubuntu and the snap Community provide a series of free Smart Display apps for customer’s. With various industry standard apps, it decreases the time to market of customers’ IoT applications, and gain market opportunities”

Let’s dig deeper into the apps on Ubuntu Core and how a reliable OS will shape your user experience.

Making sure there’s a snap for that

When you try and make everyone happy, no one is happy. If the operating system on your device only fully supports apps for a fraction of use-cases, sales will suffer, integration gets harder, and user-friction builds up.

By running Ubuntu Core, smart displays have access to the extensive snapcraft.io software store, where customers can harness our community powered apps. These apps, called snaps, are secure and easy-to-update, and include free apps for digital signage and smart displays. If customers want to write proprietary software, Canonical has a suite of products that makes building an IoT ecosystem easier than ever. 

Why your Smart display should run Ubuntu Core

If the operating system is not reliable in all users applications, updates choke the network. Security flaws are slow to be patched and users start to find workarounds. Then, security holes appear and devices start to make headlines for all the wrong reasons.

Ubuntu Core brings industrial stability and security to IoT. It takes all of Canonical and Ubuntu’s expertise from 15 years of operating system development and puts it into a light, IoT friendly model. Users benefit from 5 free years of kernel and OS updates, with the option to extend to 10 years. Further, Ubuntu Core is built with security at its heart, with strictly confined system architecture that ensures device managers have full control of what affects their device.

Summary

Advantech made a full-featured and powerful board that caters for cross-industry smart display use-cases. By partnering with Ubuntu, and having their smart displays run Ubuntu Core, users of this board get access to applications that match their business ideas, and a stable OS they can rely on.

Are you planning a smart display product? Your next steps should be to read our white-papers on building an IoT ecosystem and using open source smart display apps. They are a must read whether you’re a device manufacturer entering the lucrative smart display market, or a screen owner who wants to provide the best customer experience.

Then, contact us so we can partner with  you, every step of the way.

Related posts


Canonical
2 December 2024

Canonical announces public beta of optimized Ubuntu image for Qualcomm IoT platforms

Canonical announcements Article

Today Canonical, the publisher of Ubuntu, and Qualcomm® Technologies announce the official beta launch of the very first optimized image of  Ubuntu for Qualcomm® IoT Platforms. Through this beta program, developers will be able to download and use Ubuntu 22.04 LTS for the Qualcomm® RB3 Gen 2 Vision kit, which runs on the Qualcomm® QCS6490 ...


Gabriel Aguiar Noury
21 November 2024

EdgeIQ and Ubuntu Core; bringing security and scalability to device management 

Internet of Things Article

Today, EdgeIQ and Canonical announced the release of the EdgeIQ Coda snap and official support of Ubuntu Core on the EdgeIQ Symphony platform. EdgeIQ Symphony helps you simplify and scale workflows for device fleet operations, data consumption and delivery, and application orchestration. Distributing EdgeIQ Coda as a snap brings the power ...


Canonical
19 November 2024

Canonical provides the ideal platform for Microsoft Azure IoT Operations

IoT Article

London, 19 November 2024. Canonical has collaborated with Microsoft as an early adopter partner and tested Microsoft Azure IoT Operations on Ubuntu Core and Kubernetes, which is notable as Microsoft today released Azure IoT Operations, a unified data plane providing significant improvements in node data capture, edge-based telemetry proce ...