This conversation looks at how Advantech and NXP are turning a new generation of Arm-based edge hardware into deployable industrial platforms rather than just another SoC launch. The focus is the i.MX 95 family, positioned here as the step up in compute, graphics, and edge AI capability that lets Advantech build board-level and system-level products for HMI, vision, automation, and embedded inference. The message is less about raw peak numbers than about a usable stack: silicon, modules, carrier design, software enablement, and long product availability. https://www.advantech.com/
A key theme is scalability across form factors. Advantech describes a range built around NXP processors, from compact OSM modules to SMARC and ready-to-integrate boards, so customers can move from a tiny embedded node to a more feature-rich edge computer without changing ecosystem too much. That matters in industrial design, where display support, graphics, AI acceleration, power budget, thermal envelope, and I/O density all need to be balanced against enclosure size and certification path.
The i.MX 95 part stands out here as the higher-performance option, combining stronger multimedia and graphics capability with on-chip AI processing for edge workloads. Alongside it, the i.MX 93 appears as the smaller and lower-power route, especially relevant for compact SOM designs and cost- or energy-sensitive devices. The discussion around OSM Size-S and related module formats underlines a practical market shift: customers want standardized, highly integrated compute blocks that shorten design cycles while still leaving room for custom carrier boards and application-specific I/O.
Software and compliance are just as central as hardware in this interview. Advantech highlights Ubuntu Pro support on NXP-based platforms, with the appeal of a long maintenance window and a cleaner path toward European Cyber Resilience Act requirements coming into force in 2027. In other words, the value proposition is not only edge AI or graphics, but lifecycle management, security updates, BSP stability, and a more predictable route from prototype to deployed device in regulated industrial environments.
What makes the partnership credible is the industrial framing: longevity, open ecosystem thinking, and time-to-market. NXP’s long availability commitments and Advantech’s module and off-the-shelf product strategy give OEMs flexibility to choose between a finished platform and a scalable embedded design-in path. Filmed at Embedded World 2026 in Nuremberg, the interview captures a familiar reality of the embedded market: the winning products are usually the ones where silicon roadmaps, open software, module standards, and long-term maintenance line up into one coherent platform.
All my Embedded World videos are in this playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjgUpdNMBkGzEWU6YVxR8Ga



