Raspberry Pi-Compatible Development Board Released
kodiaktau writes: Hardkernel has released a new Raspberry Pi-compatible development board based on the Samsung Exynos SoC. The board is smaller than a typical Pi, keeping basic HDMI, USB and CSI interfaces. It also has a 26-pin expansion board with more GPIO available, though it lacks an Ethernet jack. Initial prices as estimated around $30. The article makes the interesting point that this and other devices are marketed as "Raspberry Pi-compatible." The Raspberry Pi Foundation may run into name retention issues (similar to the ones Arduino had) as related hardware piggybacks on its success.
The ODROID-W board uses the same Broadcom 2835 SoC as the Raspberry Pi board, that's why it's 100% software compatible.
There's also a Smart Watch implementation based on it.
Windowes is the standard Operating System (OS) for microcomputers and anything that does not run the standard is just a toy or a curiosity.
UNITE with the Campaign for a Free Internet because today, our future begins with tomorrow!
Call me when they develop a reliable file system for sd-card flash memory. I have had nothing but trouble with the Pi.
Instead of making yet another "Raspberry Pi clone", none of which turn out to be compatible in any meaningful way, perhaps you could make something that is better than a Raspberry Pi. The Raspberry Pi is actually pretty shit (with two exceptions, price and GPU), so there is room for improvement. Use it!
If they refuse to tell us the price, then we obviously cannot buy it. I guess they don't want to actually sell this item. It's just a dishonest PR stunt.
Sir, your key board may be malfunctioning on the "S" key, please debug it before transmitting any more bits on the inter-Net. Also your mother is a toad.
UNITE with the Campaign for a Free Internet because today, our future begins with tomorrow!
The board integrates a real time clock. This makes it ideal in remote, disconnected or power-safe configurations. From a wild-life camera to an embedded dishwasher controller. Being compatible, low-cost, running Linux and 'just works an community supported' is a big plus. I'd say, bring more of those clones.
A glitch a day keeps the bugs away.
What makes this thing truly "Raspberry Pi-compatible" is that it uses the same Broadcom SoC. There's nothing Samsung about this thing.
Maybe that will solve the problems. The form factor is a little different though, so not all the old toys work.
WTF Slashdot editors? It says plain as day right on the product page that it's a Broadcom SoC.
rtc, battery support and form factor... and price. great!
The broadcom soc used in the rpi is the biggest, slowest, most power hungry, crashy piece of shit. The samsung socs are much better.
How did this take so long? Why is this the first?