Intel Releases $99 'MinnowBoard Max,' an Open-Source Single-Board Computer
A few months back, we posted a video interview with some of the folks behind the Linux-friendly, x86-based MinnowBoard. TechCrunch reports the release of a more powerful version of the same all-in-one computer, now with a 1.91GHz Atom E3845 processor. According to the linked article, "The board's schematics are also available for download and the Intel graphics chipset has open-source drivers so hackers can have their way with the board. While it doesn’t compete directly with the Raspberry Pi – the Pi is more an educational tool and already has a robust ecosystem – it is a way for DIYers to mess around in x86 architected systems as well as save a bit of cash. The system uses break-out boards called Lures to expand functionality."
...considering the release of Novena. the Open Source Computer: http://dangerousprototypes.com...
What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
Why is it that every time someone puts a new experimenter board they need to come up with some lame name for a daughterboard that adds capability?
There are plenty of other single or dual processor boards that will run Linux or Android, that are out already. Some are considerably cheaper. Unless the 64-bit Intel architecture is spectacularly more efficient than the A10, A13 and A20s we have access to already it's difficult to see what this board has that the Cubies and Olimex's don't already provide.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
The vast bulk of the functionality comes from an Intel processor about whose internals they will tell you approximately NOTHING, let alone let you modify it. Most of the rest comes from other equally closed chips.
How is that open source?
There's basically NO open source hardware out there. And if there were nobody would be in a position to do much with it, because it would take a fab to make any change.
Have standards dropped so far that we're forgetting that?
Seriously though, way to cripple the roll-out of a product with potential.
You are having deja-vu
It's not a repost, rather a massive improvement over that unaccepted submission.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
You are having deja-vu.
than a $39 Raspberry Pi?
For the most part everyone needs BT and WiFi on their boards, so they really need to be included. Sure, you can buy an add-on card, but i would rather have it on the board out of the box...
It would add what, 10 bucks at the most? ... just do it already.. geeesh...
---- Booth was a patriot ----
What about the accepted submission from the 31st?
http://hardware.slashdot.org/s...
I will be following this with great interest. The closest device that compete with this, I think, is the ARM-based cubieboard/cubietruck. I have a cubieboard 2 with Debian for development that runs Apache, MySQL, DNS, DHCP, and a Mumble server from a SATA laptop hardrive - costs about 80 dollars without the hard drive and runs on 5V. For the Linux enthusiast, this class of device is about as good as it gets.
The Intel Galileo board has 8 GPIO pins, but these are not nearly as useful as on an Arduino or Raspberry Pi because they are actually multiplexed through I2C rather than connected directly to the processor, and thus are much slower to read or toggle than on other project boards. Is the same true of the MinnowBoard Max, or does it have real GPIO? This might not matter if you're going to use it as a router or NAS, but for embedded projects it can make a big difference.
The $50 BeagleBone Black has many of these features and more GPIO, but lacks RAM and has only one CPU. The ODROID series can be specced with multiple ARM cores. This "Minnow" seems like the next step up, for users who really need SATA, lots of RAM and multiple x86 cores. There's probably a big enough niche for portable/cheaper PC-based hardware for this to find traction, but for anything that doesn't need x86 or huge RAM there are cheaper options. I just hope the supply issues with the BeagleBone Black get sorted out soon!
sustainable living
Sales taxes in Europe are lower than the US.
It costs EUR 190 after taxes in the UK. Thats about $260. Fucking insane.
A more or less complete computer at that form factor for $260 is quite neat actually.
This appears to be a duplicate
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Odroid U3 http://www.hardkernel.com/main...
Intel seems to be stuck making these Atom range of CPU's for the last 4+ years.
They were a "fad" back then, and even now, they just dont cut it.
I suppose noone could of predicted ARM cpus would improve this quickly, but its time to move on Intel. Atom is a dead end in the current market.
Yes they do. But hardly anyone makes ARM chips that draw 5W (nVidia is the only one that comes to mind). Most are 1-2W under load, with the slower ones closer to 250mW.
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I only stopped using a 1200MHz P3 a couple of years ago. It was nice because it was the newest machine I owned that you could get deterministic CPU timing results out of. Building LLVM on it was a pain (over an hour), but 4 of them would be quite reasonable. My NAS / media centre box is currently using an AMD E-350, which is a dual-core 1.6GHz part - I think this would probably be faster. If it has a well-supported GPU and a decent collection of SATA ports, I might be tempted...
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Or for a ready-to-populate and run system at $129:
Intel Bay Trail NUC Kit DN2820FYKH:
http://www.legitreviews.com/intel-bay-trail-nuc-kit-dn2820fyk-arrives-just-128_134400
-- kjh
Sales taxes in Europe are lower than the US.
Eh, what? Which planet were you speaking of, again?
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
princing from distributor is 226$..... fake news
You are having deja-vu.