thumb|Qseven module VIA QSM-8Q90 with VIA Nano U3500 thumb| Wseven module iWave iW-RainbowW-G20M with Renesas RZ/G1M ([[ARM Cortex-A15)]] Qseven, a computer-on-module (COM) form factor, is a small, highly integrated computer module that can be used in a design application much like an integrated circuit component. It is smaller than other computer-on-module standards such as COM Express, ETX or XTX and is limited to very low power consuming CPUs. The maximum power consumption should be no more than 12 watts.
thumb|Qseven module VIA QSM-8Q90 with VIA Nano U3500 thumb| Wseven module iWave iW-RainbowW-G20M with Renesas RZ/G1M ([[ARM Cortex-A15)]] Qseven, a computer-on-module (COM) form factor, is a small, highly integrated computer module that can be used in a design application much like an integrated circuit component. It is smaller than other computer-on-module standards such as COM Express, ETX or XTX and is limited to very low power consuming CPUs. The maximum power consumption should be no more than 12 watts.
==Specification== The name comes from the word "quadratic" due to the square shape of the original module, 70 mm on a side. Qseven was specified by Congatec, MSC and SECO in July 2008 as an independent standard for industry-level applications. Other companies based in Europe such as Kontron adopted the standard, but after a few years it had not yet been popular in the USA. The Qseven specification is hosted by the Standardization Group for Embedded Technologies (SGeT), which took over from the original Qseven consortium in 2013. The revision 2.0 was released 9 September 2012, and 2.1 on 25 February 2016.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).