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Libre Computer's Tritium Is A Line Of Low-Cost Allwinner ARM Boards

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  • Libre Computer's Tritium Is A Line Of Low-Cost Allwinner ARM Boards

    Phoronix: Libre Computer's Tritium Is A Line Of Low-Cost Allwinner ARM Boards

    In addition to Le Potato and Renegade, another line-up of ARM boards being offered by Libre Computer is Tritium. The Libre Computer Tritium boards are Allwinner-based boards with options from the H2+ for IoT use-cases, the H3 as a mid-range offering, or H5 for a better-performing ARM board that is well supported by the open-source Linux community.

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    Originally posted by phoronix View Post
    - ALL-H3-CC H2+ - ALL-H3-CC H3 - ALL-H3-CC H5 - AML-S905X-CC Le Potato - Firefly ROC-RK3328-CC - Jetson TX2 - ODROID-C2 - Pine64 1GB - Raspberry Pi 2 B - Raspberry Pi 3 B - Raspberry Pi 3 B+ - Socionext Developerbox - Tinker Board
    Where are the line breaks? Or is this intentional?

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    • #3
      Originally posted by tildearrow View Post

      Where are the line breaks? Or is this intentional?
      Should be fixed now, thanks. They got malformed on an edit.
      Michael Larabel
      https://www.michaellarabel.com/

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      • #4
        Not very enticing at that price. The C2 is a mere 7$ more but consistently faster, and in many cases - significantly so, and more feature rich.

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        • #5
          libre computer lists opengl es among specs, but fails to mentions that it is not libre at all

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          • #6
            For IoT purposes, I don't care much for performance, but really looking for something that has native PoE support. Hoping to find a Pi look alike that has it built in (the Pi3 PoE hat is too big and covers a lot of pins).

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            • #7
              Small, cheap boards. Still... USB 2.0? 512MB of RAM? What year is it? Do they also have a floppy disk drive controller? Do they at least support CGA screens? Can you use anything newer than Red Hat 1.0?

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              • #8
                Michael,
                It would be interesting to test, the RockPro64

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                • #9
                  Can anyone suggest a SBC which doesn't include eMMC and just has NOR/NAND raw access?
                  To me, eMMC is comfortable for tinkering, but not many embedded devices use eMMC for real storage of system software.

                  Edit: That also has good Linux support.

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                  • #10
                    I would love to see a RISC-V board (other than 10k USD Si-Five board).

                    Or a high-end ARM board comparable to those founds in smartphones, such as the Snapdragon 845, Exynos 9 or Kirin 970.
                    With features like ARMv8 64-bit DynamIQ, USB 3, LPDDR4, Bluetooth, NFC, Wi-Fi, Gigabit Ethernet, various sensors.

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