dariush_ab
21-05-2014, 18:52
با سلام.
در زیر مشخصات اکثر مینی بردهای معروف را همراه قیمت و توضبح مختصر مشاهده می کنید :
کابی برد تک هسته ای و برد کاربردی E8 از قلم افتاده!
دوستان میتوانند نظراتشون رو راجع به بردها و برد انتخابی و دلیلشون برای انتخاب یک برد بیان کنند تا همه استفاده کنند.
در ضمن مشخص خواهد شد که چه بردی بیشتر مورد پسند و تقاضا بوده و از این طریق فروشگاه میتواند بیشتر روی اون برد از بابت پشتیبانی آموزشی کار کند.
86Duino and 86Duino One
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Company/project — DM&P, 86Duino.com
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — DM&P Vortex86EX (1x x86 @ 300MHz)
Memory — 128MB RAM
Price — $39
Description — DM&P’s 86Duino features Arduino-compatible expansion and a modular COM+baseboard approach. For $30 more, the 86Duino One model supplies the same RAM, as well as Ethernet, USB, and MicroSD connections, and adds HD audio and more expansion I/O.
A10-OLinuXino-Lime
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Company/project — Olimex, OLinuXino, Mouser
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM
Price — $42
Description — This tiny (84 x 60mm) Android- and Linux-ready SBC is also available with an optional mini-PC enclosure. I/O includes microSD, SATA, Ethernet, and HDMI, plus three USB ports and 160 GPIOs.
A20-OLinuXino-Micro
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Company/project — Olimex, OLinuXino, Mouser
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; optional 4GB NAND flash ($14 more) with preloaded Android
Price — $77
Description — The faster, dual-core OLinuXino model is 1080p-ready and has all the I/O of the Lime, but doubles the RAM and adds VGA, LCD/touch, and audio I/O. The A20-OLinuXino-Micro also adds UEXT expansion connectors, with optional modules.
APC Rock
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Company/project — Via Technologies
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Via Wondermedia (1x Cortex-A9 @ 800MHz)
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $56
Description — The APC Rock uses Via’s 170 x 80mm neo-ITX form-factor, and runs Android and Linux, including Firefox OS. I/O includes microSD, 10/100 Ethernet, audio, three USB 2.0 ports, and expansion headers. The board is also offered as part of a cardboard-enclosed “APC Paper” mini-PC.
ArndaleBoard-K
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Company/project — ArndaleBoard.org, InSignal, Pyrustek
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Samsung Exynos 5250 (2x Cortex-A15 cores @ 1.7GHz, 4x Cortex-A7 cores @ 1.2GHz); Mali-T604 GPU
Memory — 2GB LPDDR3e RAM
Price — $259
Description — The ArndaleBoard-K replaces the earlier OrigenBoard, and is similarly backed by Samsung and manufacturing partner InSignal. It’s implemented as a COM+baseboard assembly, consisting of a tiny COM that integrates a hexa-core Exynos 5250 SoC along with a few other components, plugged into a feature-rich baseboard loaded with sensors. There are also modular wireless, audio, and camera modules, plus an optional display.
Arndale Octa Board
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Company/project — ArnadaleBoard.org, InSignal, Pyrustek
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Samsung Exynos 5420 Octa (4x Cortex-A15 @ 1.8GHz and 4x Cortex-A7 @ 1.3GHz); ARM Mali T-628 MP6
Memory — 3GB LPDDR3e RAM
Price — $179
Description — ArndaleBoard.org’s new Octa board sports Samsung’s faster new Exynos 5420 SoC. It offers generous helpings of display (HDMI, eDP, and MIPI DSI) and USB connections, plus MIPI-CSI camera support and an optional wireless module.
BD-SL-i.MX6 (formerly SABRE Lite)
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Company/project — Boundary Devices, Element14
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ up to 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $199
Description — Freescale’s SABRE Lite dev board for the i.MX6 was spun off as a fully open spec “BD-SL-i.MX6″ SBC, sold by Boundary Devices and Element14. The Linux-ready board features rich I/O including RGB, LVDS, and HDMI display connections, dual camera ports, a GbE port, dual SD slots, and a SATA interface. Three USB ports are provided, along with PCIe expansion and a CAN port.
BeagleBone Black
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Company/project — BeagleBone.org, CirtcuitCo
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply_C_.28Pending. 29)
Processor — TI Sitara AM3358 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz)
Memory — 512MB RAM; 4GB flash
Price — $55
Description — The old $45 BB Black is gone, and a new $55 Rev C model with double the flash (4GB) takes its place. The now Debian-ready SBC still gives you a lot for your money, especially in expansion headers, but the real draw here is the large, vibrant Beagleboard.org community.
Banana Pi
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Company/project — Lemaker.org
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $35
Description — This Raspberry Pi clone has the same port positions, 24-pin header layout, and educational focus as the RasPi, but has a faster processor. The SBC adds to the RasPi’s feature set with twice the RAM, plus I/O including a SATA and micro-USB port.
Cosmic+
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Company/project — Phytec
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale Vybrid VF6xx (1x Cortex-A5 @ 500MHz); Cortex-M4 @ 167MHz
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM, 512MB NAND flash
Price — $65
Description — Here, again, we have modular COM+baseboard SBC sandwich. The Cosmic+ features a Phycore-Vybrid COM with a Freescale Vybrid SoC that combines the rarely seen Cortex-A5 core running Linux, plus a microcontroller unit (MCU) running Freescale’s MQX RTOS. The combo’s I/O includes a serial port and dual 60-pin connectors. For $10 less, you can scrap the SoC’s MCU feature by choosing a “Cosmic” version instead, but what’s the point?
Cubieboard2
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Company/project — Cubieboard.org, Wang and Tom Development, Ltd.
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, 4GB NAND flash
Price — $59
Description — Identical to the original Cubieboard except for upgrading to the A20 SoC, the Cubieboard2 supports Android and Linux, and offers SATA, microSD, Ethernet, HDMI, and dual USB ports. It also supplies a 96-pin expansion connector.
CubieTruck (Cubieboard3)
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Company/project — Cubieboard.org, Wang and Tom Development, Ltd.
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM, optional NAND or TSD flash
Price — $89
Description — The CubieTruck offers everything the Cubieboard2 does, and more, but has fewer expansion pins (54) and lacks standard flash. You can choose between dual microSD slots, or a mix of microSD and flash options. New features include a generous 2GB of RAM, plus WiFi, Bluetooth, gigabit Ethernet, VGA, and SPDIF ports.
Galileo
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Company/project — Intel
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Intel Quark X1000 (1x Pentium-compatible core @ 400MHz)
Memory — 256MB DRAM
Price — $60
Description — This Internet of Things oriented SBC runs Linux on Intel’s low-powerQuark CPU (You can see links before reply) and offers Arduino compatibility. Other features include microSD, Ethernet, GPIO, analog inputs, dual USBs, JTAG, and serial ports. Prices range widely, but Fry’s has it for a low $60, and Intel is giving away 5,000 free boards (You can see links before reply) to developers.
Gizmo
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Company/project — AMD, GizmoSphere.org, SemiconductorStore.com
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — AMD G-Series T40E APU (1x x86 @ 1GHz) with A55E controller hub
Memory — 1GB DDR3 SDRAM
Price — $189
Description — This unrestricted, open spec version of AMD’s Gizmo SBC is based on its x86-based G-Series APU. The Gizmo offers VGA, DisplayPort, audio, SATA, and USB ports. There’s also GPIO and analog I/O, plus PCIe expansion. For $10 more, you get a dev kit version with an expansion board, a probe, and a Linux or Android image.
Hackberry A10
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Company/project — Miniand
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 512MB (optional 1GB) DDR3 RAM (100MB reserved for GPU), 4GB NAND flash
Price — $65
Description — This Android-oriented Allwinner A10 vehicle is showing its age, but is still notable for its built-in WiFi, full-sized SD slot, analog video outputs, and four-pin serial header. Other features include HDMI, audio, Ethernet, and dual USB ports.
IGEPv5 Community Edition
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Company/project — ISEE
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — TI OMAP5432 (2x Cortex-A15 cores @ 1.7GHz); POWERVR SGX544 GPU; 2x Cortex-M4 MCUs
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, optional NAND flash
Price — $207
Description — This high-end Cortex-A15 newcomer from Barcelona is a community version of a commercial SBC. The 135 x 95mm SBC supports Yocto OE Linux and Android, and provides gigabit Ethernet, HDMI, DisplayPort, and five USB ports, including a 3.0 OTG version. It offers extensive expansion interfaces and supports industrial temperatures.
Improv
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Company/project — Make Play Live (Coherent Theory LLC), Vault Technology
Product page (You can see links before reply/home)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $75
Description — Aaron Seigo and the KDE Plasma Active community, which backed the open source Spark tablet (You can see links before reply), switched to the Improv SBC instead of the planned Vivaldi tablet, which is still on the roadmap. The tiny Improv, which similarly runs Meego-based Mer Linux with KDE, offers swappable CPU and feature cards using a modular EOMA-68 form-factor. The sandwich-style (COM+baseboard) Improv can stand alone, or can be plugged into a laptop dock.
i.MX6 Rex
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Company/project — Fedevel, Voipac
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Dual (2x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz); single and quad-core models optional
Memory — 512MB soldered DDR3 RAM, expandable to 4GB
Price — $235
Description — This modular, credit card sized COM+baseboard combo was developed by Slovakia-based Fedeval to support its embedded training courses. The i.MX6 Rex features dual microSD slots, plus CFAST and SATA storage. The Rex offers extensive I/O and ample expansion, including PCIe, dual Mini-PCIe, and dual SIM slots.
MarsBoard RK3066
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Company/project — Haoyu Electronics, MarsBoard.com
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Rockchip RK3066 (2x Cortex-A9 @ 1.6GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, expandable to 2GB; 4GB eMMC NAND flash, expandable to 8GB
Price — $60
Description — The MarsBoard RK3066 replaces earlier Allwinner-fueled MarsBoards, and similarly runs Linux and Android. The modular, COM+baseboard design incorporates a generous five USB ports and dual gigabit Ethernet ports, along with HDMI, S/PDIF, IR, and camera interfaces.
MinnowBoard
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Company/project — Intel
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Intel Atom E640 (1x x86 @ 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR2 RAM
Price — $189
Description — You can now buy the MinnowBoard for a discounted $189, but you’ll probably want to wait until July for the $99, Atom E3800 based MinnowBoard Max (You can see links before reply). The original model runs a Yocto-compatible Angstrom Linux on an older Atom E640. The extensive I/O includes dual PCIe interfaces.
Odroid-U3
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Company/project — Hardkernel, Odroid project
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor –Samsung Exynos 4412 Prime (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1.7GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB LP-DDR2 SDRAM
Price — $59
Description — The Samsung Exynos 4 based Odroid-U3 is software compatible with the discontinued U2, and supports Linux and Android KitKat. The price is kept low due to the lack of flash, but microSD and eMMC expansion options are available. Other I/O includes micro-HDMI, Ethernet, audio, and four USB ports. The 83 x 48 x 22mm dimensions reflect the built-in heat sink.
Odroid-XU
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Company/project — Hardkernel, Odroid project
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor –Samsung Exynos 5410 Octa (4x Cortex-A15 @ 1.6GHz and 4x Cortex-A7 @ 1.2GHz); PowerVR SGX544MP3 GPU
Memory — 2GB LPDDR3 RAM
Price — $169
Description — The Odroid-XU sports an Exynos 5410 octa-core, but it’s reportedly (You can see links before reply) due for an “XU2″ replacement featuring a faster Exynos 5420 (1.8GHz/1.3GHz), now found on the rival Arndale Octa. The XU provides microSD and eMMC flash expansion, six USB ports, and a micro-HDMI port. For $30 more, the XU+E model adds power analysis sensors.
Parallella
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Company/project — Adapteva, Parallella.org
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor –Xilinx Zynq-7020 or -7010 SoC (2x Cortex-A9 @ 667MHz plus FPGA); 16-core Epiphany RISC coproc.
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $99
Description — Aimed at power-efficient server clustering applications and parallel programming research, the Parallella features a Zynq ARM/FPGA SoC running Ubuntu, plus a homegrown 16-core Epiphany coprocessor. I/O includes microSD, gigabit Ethernet, micro-HDMI, and dual USB ports. Four 60-pin connectors provide for Epiphany and FPGA extensions.
PhoenixA20
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Company/project — Anichips, Swiftboard.org
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $59
Description — The makers of the Allwinner A10 based SwiftBoard have launched the first pico-ITX form factor board based on the dual-core A20 SoC. The 100 x 72mm PhoenixA20 offers multiple display and wireless interfaces, as well as camera and Ethernet ports. The Android- and Linux-ready board supports -20 to 70° temperatures, which is remarkable for such a low-cost SBC.
Radxa Rock
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Company/project — Radxa
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Rockchip RK3188 (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1.6GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM; 8GB NAND flash (1GB/4GB on $69 Radxa Rock Lite)
Price — $89
Description — This tiny, 100 x 80mm SBC runs Android or Linux on the quad-core RK3188. A Lite version with half the memory sells for $20 less. Both models offer WiFi and Bluetooth, as well as real-world HDMI, Ethernet, USB, and S/PDIF ports. Expansion headers support many more interfaces. Add $10 for a case and antenna.
Raspberry Pi Model B
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Company/project — Raspberry Pi Foundation
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Broadcom BCM2835 (1x ARM11 @ 700MHz); Broadcom VideoCore IV GPU
Memory — 512MB SDRAM
Price — $35
Description — New documentation for the VideoCore IV GPU makes the world’s leading hacker SBC more open. The specs may be underpowered, but the Pi is power efficient, expandable, and backed up by a huge community and hardware/software ecosystem. There’s also a stripped down, $25 Model A, and a new COM version (You can see links before reply).
RIoTboard
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Company/project — Newark Element14, RIoTboard.org
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Solo (1x Cortex-A9 @ up to 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; 4GB eMMC flash
Price — $74
Description — The RIoT (“Revolutionizing the Internet of Things”) board runs Android or Linux on a low-power, single-core Cortex-A9 SoC. The 120 x 75mm SBC offers several advantages over the similar WandBoard Solo, including twice the RAM, built-in flash, and many more USB ports.
SAMA5D3 Xplained
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Company/project — Newark Element14, Atmel
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Atmel SAMA5D3 (1x Cortex-A5 @ 536MHz)
Memory — 256MB DDR2 RAM; 256MB NAND flash
Price — $79
Description — Atmel and its Linux4SAM developers site collaborated with Newark Element14 to produce this Linux-ready SBC in order to showcase Atmel’s new SAMA5D3 processor. Designed for wearables and other low-power devices, the 125 x 75mm SBC includes dual LAN ports and Arduino compatibility.
SoCkit Development Kit
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Company/project — Arrow Electronics. Terasic, RocketBoards.org
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Altera Cyclone V SX (2x Cortex-A9 with Stratix V-like FPGA)
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $299
Description — Just as the ZedBoard and MicroZed open up the Xylinx Zynq, Arrow’s SoCkit expands the playing field for Altera’s own hybrid ARM/FPGA SoC. Interfaces include VGA, audio, gigabit Ethernet, and USB, plus high speed expansion with off-the-shelf or custom expansion cards. Terasic assisted on the FPGA integration.
Udoo Quad
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Company/project — Udoo
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz) or optional DualLite
Atmel SAM3X8E ARM Cortex-M3 MCU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $135
Description — This former Kickstarter project is giving Wandboard.org some competition. The 110 x 85mm Udoo Quad features a Cortex-M3 based Arduino Due subsystem. There are also a pair of lower cost, dual-core i.MX6DualLite options: a $99 Udoo Dual that lacks SATA and the Quad’s faster Vivante GC355 GPU, and a $79 Dual Basic that foregoes WiFi and gigabit Ethernet.
Wandboard Quad
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Company/project — Wandboard.org
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz) or optional Solo or Dual
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM (1GB for Dual, 512MB for Solo)
Price — $129
Description — Wandboard.org is one of the more popular open board communities, although like a handful of other offerings listed here, the Wandboard is designed as a modular, sandwich-style, COM+baseboard assembly that makes it more of a “DBC” than an SBC. The combo’s COM includes the i.MX6 and RAM, plus wireless, SD, and camera interfaces. A $99 DualLite-based Wandboard Dual loses the SATA, and a $79, single-core Solo version skips the wireless radios.
ZedBoard
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Company/project — Avnet
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Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor –Xilinx Zynq-7020 (2x Cortex-A9 @ 667MHz plus FPGA)
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM; 4GB SD card
Price — $395
Description — Avnet seems more focused on its similarly Zynq-based MicroZed (You can see links before reply) modules than on the ZedBoard, which is currently out of stock. The pricey SBC offers the I/O you’d expect from a typical $100 ARM board, but supplements it with extensive FPGA-based expansion I/O.
در زیر مشخصات اکثر مینی بردهای معروف را همراه قیمت و توضبح مختصر مشاهده می کنید :
کابی برد تک هسته ای و برد کاربردی E8 از قلم افتاده!
دوستان میتوانند نظراتشون رو راجع به بردها و برد انتخابی و دلیلشون برای انتخاب یک برد بیان کنند تا همه استفاده کنند.
در ضمن مشخص خواهد شد که چه بردی بیشتر مورد پسند و تقاضا بوده و از این طریق فروشگاه میتواند بیشتر روی اون برد از بابت پشتیبانی آموزشی کار کند.
86Duino and 86Duino One
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Company/project — DM&P, 86Duino.com
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — DM&P Vortex86EX (1x x86 @ 300MHz)
Memory — 128MB RAM
Price — $39
Description — DM&P’s 86Duino features Arduino-compatible expansion and a modular COM+baseboard approach. For $30 more, the 86Duino One model supplies the same RAM, as well as Ethernet, USB, and MicroSD connections, and adds HD audio and more expansion I/O.
A10-OLinuXino-Lime
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Company/project — Olimex, OLinuXino, Mouser
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM
Price — $42
Description — This tiny (84 x 60mm) Android- and Linux-ready SBC is also available with an optional mini-PC enclosure. I/O includes microSD, SATA, Ethernet, and HDMI, plus three USB ports and 160 GPIOs.
A20-OLinuXino-Micro
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Company/project — Olimex, OLinuXino, Mouser
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; optional 4GB NAND flash ($14 more) with preloaded Android
Price — $77
Description — The faster, dual-core OLinuXino model is 1080p-ready and has all the I/O of the Lime, but doubles the RAM and adds VGA, LCD/touch, and audio I/O. The A20-OLinuXino-Micro also adds UEXT expansion connectors, with optional modules.
APC Rock
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Company/project — Via Technologies
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Via Wondermedia (1x Cortex-A9 @ 800MHz)
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $56
Description — The APC Rock uses Via’s 170 x 80mm neo-ITX form-factor, and runs Android and Linux, including Firefox OS. I/O includes microSD, 10/100 Ethernet, audio, three USB 2.0 ports, and expansion headers. The board is also offered as part of a cardboard-enclosed “APC Paper” mini-PC.
ArndaleBoard-K
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Company/project — ArndaleBoard.org, InSignal, Pyrustek
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Samsung Exynos 5250 (2x Cortex-A15 cores @ 1.7GHz, 4x Cortex-A7 cores @ 1.2GHz); Mali-T604 GPU
Memory — 2GB LPDDR3e RAM
Price — $259
Description — The ArndaleBoard-K replaces the earlier OrigenBoard, and is similarly backed by Samsung and manufacturing partner InSignal. It’s implemented as a COM+baseboard assembly, consisting of a tiny COM that integrates a hexa-core Exynos 5250 SoC along with a few other components, plugged into a feature-rich baseboard loaded with sensors. There are also modular wireless, audio, and camera modules, plus an optional display.
Arndale Octa Board
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Company/project — ArnadaleBoard.org, InSignal, Pyrustek
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Samsung Exynos 5420 Octa (4x Cortex-A15 @ 1.8GHz and 4x Cortex-A7 @ 1.3GHz); ARM Mali T-628 MP6
Memory — 3GB LPDDR3e RAM
Price — $179
Description — ArndaleBoard.org’s new Octa board sports Samsung’s faster new Exynos 5420 SoC. It offers generous helpings of display (HDMI, eDP, and MIPI DSI) and USB connections, plus MIPI-CSI camera support and an optional wireless module.
BD-SL-i.MX6 (formerly SABRE Lite)
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Company/project — Boundary Devices, Element14
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ up to 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $199
Description — Freescale’s SABRE Lite dev board for the i.MX6 was spun off as a fully open spec “BD-SL-i.MX6″ SBC, sold by Boundary Devices and Element14. The Linux-ready board features rich I/O including RGB, LVDS, and HDMI display connections, dual camera ports, a GbE port, dual SD slots, and a SATA interface. Three USB ports are provided, along with PCIe expansion and a CAN port.
BeagleBone Black
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Company/project — BeagleBone.org, CirtcuitCo
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply_C_.28Pending. 29)
Processor — TI Sitara AM3358 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz)
Memory — 512MB RAM; 4GB flash
Price — $55
Description — The old $45 BB Black is gone, and a new $55 Rev C model with double the flash (4GB) takes its place. The now Debian-ready SBC still gives you a lot for your money, especially in expansion headers, but the real draw here is the large, vibrant Beagleboard.org community.
Banana Pi
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Company/project — Lemaker.org
LinuxGizmos coverage (You can see links before reply)
Product page (You can see links before reply)
Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $35
Description — This Raspberry Pi clone has the same port positions, 24-pin header layout, and educational focus as the RasPi, but has a faster processor. The SBC adds to the RasPi’s feature set with twice the RAM, plus I/O including a SATA and micro-USB port.
Cosmic+
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Company/project — Phytec
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Processor — Freescale Vybrid VF6xx (1x Cortex-A5 @ 500MHz); Cortex-M4 @ 167MHz
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM, 512MB NAND flash
Price — $65
Description — Here, again, we have modular COM+baseboard SBC sandwich. The Cosmic+ features a Phycore-Vybrid COM with a Freescale Vybrid SoC that combines the rarely seen Cortex-A5 core running Linux, plus a microcontroller unit (MCU) running Freescale’s MQX RTOS. The combo’s I/O includes a serial port and dual 60-pin connectors. For $10 less, you can scrap the SoC’s MCU feature by choosing a “Cosmic” version instead, but what’s the point?
Cubieboard2
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Company/project — Cubieboard.org, Wang and Tom Development, Ltd.
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Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, 4GB NAND flash
Price — $59
Description — Identical to the original Cubieboard except for upgrading to the A20 SoC, the Cubieboard2 supports Android and Linux, and offers SATA, microSD, Ethernet, HDMI, and dual USB ports. It also supplies a 96-pin expansion connector.
CubieTruck (Cubieboard3)
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Company/project — Cubieboard.org, Wang and Tom Development, Ltd.
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Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM, optional NAND or TSD flash
Price — $89
Description — The CubieTruck offers everything the Cubieboard2 does, and more, but has fewer expansion pins (54) and lacks standard flash. You can choose between dual microSD slots, or a mix of microSD and flash options. New features include a generous 2GB of RAM, plus WiFi, Bluetooth, gigabit Ethernet, VGA, and SPDIF ports.
Galileo
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Company/project — Intel
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Processor — Intel Quark X1000 (1x Pentium-compatible core @ 400MHz)
Memory — 256MB DRAM
Price — $60
Description — This Internet of Things oriented SBC runs Linux on Intel’s low-powerQuark CPU (You can see links before reply) and offers Arduino compatibility. Other features include microSD, Ethernet, GPIO, analog inputs, dual USBs, JTAG, and serial ports. Prices range widely, but Fry’s has it for a low $60, and Intel is giving away 5,000 free boards (You can see links before reply) to developers.
Gizmo
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Company/project — AMD, GizmoSphere.org, SemiconductorStore.com
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Processor — AMD G-Series T40E APU (1x x86 @ 1GHz) with A55E controller hub
Memory — 1GB DDR3 SDRAM
Price — $189
Description — This unrestricted, open spec version of AMD’s Gizmo SBC is based on its x86-based G-Series APU. The Gizmo offers VGA, DisplayPort, audio, SATA, and USB ports. There’s also GPIO and analog I/O, plus PCIe expansion. For $10 more, you get a dev kit version with an expansion board, a probe, and a Linux or Android image.
Hackberry A10
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Company/project — Miniand
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Processor — Allwinner A10 (1x Cortex-A8 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 512MB (optional 1GB) DDR3 RAM (100MB reserved for GPU), 4GB NAND flash
Price — $65
Description — This Android-oriented Allwinner A10 vehicle is showing its age, but is still notable for its built-in WiFi, full-sized SD slot, analog video outputs, and four-pin serial header. Other features include HDMI, audio, Ethernet, and dual USB ports.
IGEPv5 Community Edition
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Company/project — ISEE
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Processor — TI OMAP5432 (2x Cortex-A15 cores @ 1.7GHz); POWERVR SGX544 GPU; 2x Cortex-M4 MCUs
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, optional NAND flash
Price — $207
Description — This high-end Cortex-A15 newcomer from Barcelona is a community version of a commercial SBC. The 135 x 95mm SBC supports Yocto OE Linux and Android, and provides gigabit Ethernet, HDMI, DisplayPort, and five USB ports, including a 3.0 OTG version. It offers extensive expansion interfaces and supports industrial temperatures.
Improv
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Company/project — Make Play Live (Coherent Theory LLC), Vault Technology
Product page (You can see links before reply/home)
Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $75
Description — Aaron Seigo and the KDE Plasma Active community, which backed the open source Spark tablet (You can see links before reply), switched to the Improv SBC instead of the planned Vivaldi tablet, which is still on the roadmap. The tiny Improv, which similarly runs Meego-based Mer Linux with KDE, offers swappable CPU and feature cards using a modular EOMA-68 form-factor. The sandwich-style (COM+baseboard) Improv can stand alone, or can be plugged into a laptop dock.
i.MX6 Rex
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Company/project — Fedevel, Voipac
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Processor — Freescale i.MX6Dual (2x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz); single and quad-core models optional
Memory — 512MB soldered DDR3 RAM, expandable to 4GB
Price — $235
Description — This modular, credit card sized COM+baseboard combo was developed by Slovakia-based Fedeval to support its embedded training courses. The i.MX6 Rex features dual microSD slots, plus CFAST and SATA storage. The Rex offers extensive I/O and ample expansion, including PCIe, dual Mini-PCIe, and dual SIM slots.
MarsBoard RK3066
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Company/project — Haoyu Electronics, MarsBoard.com
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Processor — Rockchip RK3066 (2x Cortex-A9 @ 1.6GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM, expandable to 2GB; 4GB eMMC NAND flash, expandable to 8GB
Price — $60
Description — The MarsBoard RK3066 replaces earlier Allwinner-fueled MarsBoards, and similarly runs Linux and Android. The modular, COM+baseboard design incorporates a generous five USB ports and dual gigabit Ethernet ports, along with HDMI, S/PDIF, IR, and camera interfaces.
MinnowBoard
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Company/project — Intel
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Processor — Intel Atom E640 (1x x86 @ 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR2 RAM
Price — $189
Description — You can now buy the MinnowBoard for a discounted $189, but you’ll probably want to wait until July for the $99, Atom E3800 based MinnowBoard Max (You can see links before reply). The original model runs a Yocto-compatible Angstrom Linux on an older Atom E640. The extensive I/O includes dual PCIe interfaces.
Odroid-U3
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Company/project — Hardkernel, Odroid project
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Processor –Samsung Exynos 4412 Prime (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1.7GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB LP-DDR2 SDRAM
Price — $59
Description — The Samsung Exynos 4 based Odroid-U3 is software compatible with the discontinued U2, and supports Linux and Android KitKat. The price is kept low due to the lack of flash, but microSD and eMMC expansion options are available. Other I/O includes micro-HDMI, Ethernet, audio, and four USB ports. The 83 x 48 x 22mm dimensions reflect the built-in heat sink.
Odroid-XU
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Company/project — Hardkernel, Odroid project
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Processor –Samsung Exynos 5410 Octa (4x Cortex-A15 @ 1.6GHz and 4x Cortex-A7 @ 1.2GHz); PowerVR SGX544MP3 GPU
Memory — 2GB LPDDR3 RAM
Price — $169
Description — The Odroid-XU sports an Exynos 5410 octa-core, but it’s reportedly (You can see links before reply) due for an “XU2″ replacement featuring a faster Exynos 5420 (1.8GHz/1.3GHz), now found on the rival Arndale Octa. The XU provides microSD and eMMC flash expansion, six USB ports, and a micro-HDMI port. For $30 more, the XU+E model adds power analysis sensors.
Parallella
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Company/project — Adapteva, Parallella.org
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Processor –Xilinx Zynq-7020 or -7010 SoC (2x Cortex-A9 @ 667MHz plus FPGA); 16-core Epiphany RISC coproc.
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $99
Description — Aimed at power-efficient server clustering applications and parallel programming research, the Parallella features a Zynq ARM/FPGA SoC running Ubuntu, plus a homegrown 16-core Epiphany coprocessor. I/O includes microSD, gigabit Ethernet, micro-HDMI, and dual USB ports. Four 60-pin connectors provide for Epiphany and FPGA extensions.
PhoenixA20
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Company/project — Anichips, Swiftboard.org
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Processor — Allwinner A20 (2x Cortex-A7 @ 1GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; 4GB NAND flash
Price — $59
Description — The makers of the Allwinner A10 based SwiftBoard have launched the first pico-ITX form factor board based on the dual-core A20 SoC. The 100 x 72mm PhoenixA20 offers multiple display and wireless interfaces, as well as camera and Ethernet ports. The Android- and Linux-ready board supports -20 to 70° temperatures, which is remarkable for such a low-cost SBC.
Radxa Rock
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Company/project — Radxa
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Processor — Rockchip RK3188 (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1.6GHz); Mali-400 GPU
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM; 8GB NAND flash (1GB/4GB on $69 Radxa Rock Lite)
Price — $89
Description — This tiny, 100 x 80mm SBC runs Android or Linux on the quad-core RK3188. A Lite version with half the memory sells for $20 less. Both models offer WiFi and Bluetooth, as well as real-world HDMI, Ethernet, USB, and S/PDIF ports. Expansion headers support many more interfaces. Add $10 for a case and antenna.
Raspberry Pi Model B
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Company/project — Raspberry Pi Foundation
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Processor — Broadcom BCM2835 (1x ARM11 @ 700MHz); Broadcom VideoCore IV GPU
Memory — 512MB SDRAM
Price — $35
Description — New documentation for the VideoCore IV GPU makes the world’s leading hacker SBC more open. The specs may be underpowered, but the Pi is power efficient, expandable, and backed up by a huge community and hardware/software ecosystem. There’s also a stripped down, $25 Model A, and a new COM version (You can see links before reply).
RIoTboard
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Company/project — Newark Element14, RIoTboard.org
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Processor — Freescale i.MX6Solo (1x Cortex-A9 @ up to 1GHz)
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM; 4GB eMMC flash
Price — $74
Description — The RIoT (“Revolutionizing the Internet of Things”) board runs Android or Linux on a low-power, single-core Cortex-A9 SoC. The 120 x 75mm SBC offers several advantages over the similar WandBoard Solo, including twice the RAM, built-in flash, and many more USB ports.
SAMA5D3 Xplained
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Company/project — Newark Element14, Atmel
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Processor — Atmel SAMA5D3 (1x Cortex-A5 @ 536MHz)
Memory — 256MB DDR2 RAM; 256MB NAND flash
Price — $79
Description — Atmel and its Linux4SAM developers site collaborated with Newark Element14 to produce this Linux-ready SBC in order to showcase Atmel’s new SAMA5D3 processor. Designed for wearables and other low-power devices, the 125 x 75mm SBC includes dual LAN ports and Arduino compatibility.
SoCkit Development Kit
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Company/project — Arrow Electronics. Terasic, RocketBoards.org
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Processor — Altera Cyclone V SX (2x Cortex-A9 with Stratix V-like FPGA)
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $299
Description — Just as the ZedBoard and MicroZed open up the Xylinx Zynq, Arrow’s SoCkit expands the playing field for Altera’s own hybrid ARM/FPGA SoC. Interfaces include VGA, audio, gigabit Ethernet, and USB, plus high speed expansion with off-the-shelf or custom expansion cards. Terasic assisted on the FPGA integration.
Udoo Quad
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Company/project — Udoo
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Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz) or optional DualLite
Atmel SAM3X8E ARM Cortex-M3 MCU
Memory — 1GB DDR3 RAM
Price — $135
Description — This former Kickstarter project is giving Wandboard.org some competition. The 110 x 85mm Udoo Quad features a Cortex-M3 based Arduino Due subsystem. There are also a pair of lower cost, dual-core i.MX6DualLite options: a $99 Udoo Dual that lacks SATA and the Quad’s faster Vivante GC355 GPU, and a $79 Dual Basic that foregoes WiFi and gigabit Ethernet.
Wandboard Quad
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Company/project — Wandboard.org
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Processor — Freescale i.MX6Quad (4x Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz) or optional Solo or Dual
Memory — 2GB DDR3 RAM (1GB for Dual, 512MB for Solo)
Price — $129
Description — Wandboard.org is one of the more popular open board communities, although like a handful of other offerings listed here, the Wandboard is designed as a modular, sandwich-style, COM+baseboard assembly that makes it more of a “DBC” than an SBC. The combo’s COM includes the i.MX6 and RAM, plus wireless, SD, and camera interfaces. A $99 DualLite-based Wandboard Dual loses the SATA, and a $79, single-core Solo version skips the wireless radios.
ZedBoard
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Company/project — Avnet
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Processor –Xilinx Zynq-7020 (2x Cortex-A9 @ 667MHz plus FPGA)
Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM; 4GB SD card
Price — $395
Description — Avnet seems more focused on its similarly Zynq-based MicroZed (You can see links before reply) modules than on the ZedBoard, which is currently out of stock. The pricey SBC offers the I/O you’d expect from a typical $100 ARM board, but supplements it with extensive FPGA-based expansion I/O.