The cable is just 2D parallel optical bus. With a bundle like this, you can wrap it with a nice, thick PVC (or whatever) jacket and employ a small, square connector that matches the physical scheme of the 2D planar microled array.
It's a brute force, simple minded approach enabled by high speed, low cost microled arrays. Pretty cool I think.
The ribbon concept could be applicable to PCBs though.
What I'm getting at is, that I don't see any advantage over vcsel arrays. I'm not convinced that the price point is that different.
The caption of the image of the cable and connector reads: "CMOS ASIC with microLEDs sending data with blue light into a fiberbundle." So yes, fibre bundles.
> I don't see any advantage over vcsel arrays
They claim the following advantages:
1. Low energy use
2. Low "computational overhead"
3. Scalability
All of these at least pass the smell test. LEDs are indeed quite efficient relative to lasers. They cite about an order of magnitude "pJ/bit" advantage for the system over laser based optics, and I presume they're privy to vcsels. When you're trying to wheedle nuclear reactor restarts to run your enormous AI clusters, saving power is nice. The system has a parallel "conductor" design that likely employs high speed parallel CMOS latches, so the "computational overhead" claim could make sense: all you're doing is latching bits to/from PCB traces or IC pins so all the SerDes and multiplexing cost is gone. They claim that it can easily be scaled to more pixels/lines. Sure, I guess: low power makes that easier.There you are. All pretty simple.
I think there is use case for this outside data centers. We're at the point where copper transmission lines are a real problem for consumers. Fiber can solve the signal integrity problem for such use cases, however--despite several famous runs at it (Thunderbolt, Firewire)--the cost has always precluded widespread adoption outside niche, professional, or high-end applications. Maybe LED based optics can make fiber cost competitive with copper for such applications: one imagines a very small, very low power microLED based transceiver costing only slightly more than a USB connector on each end of such a cable with maybe 4-8 parallel fibers. Just spit-balling here
And given the talk about this as a CPO alternative, I was assuming this was for back plane and connections of a few metres, not components on the same PCB.
I would love to join you at Avicena and work on your breakthrough instead of just acquiring the IP from you in a few years.
[1] https://youtu.be/wDhnjEQyuDk?t=1569
[2] see schematic on page 373 of https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=780...