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List of single-board computers

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One of the first 10 MMD-1s, a prototype unit, produced by E&L Instruments in 1976. The "dyna-micro"/"MMD-1" was the world's first true single board computer.[citation needed] The MMD-1 had all components on a single printed circuit board, including memory, I/O, user input device, and a display. Nothing external to the single board except power was required to both program and run the MMD-1. The original design of the MMD-1 was called the "dyna-micro", but it was soon re-branded as the "MMD-1"

List of single-board computerscomputers built on a single circuit board, with microprocessor(s), memory, input/output (I/O) and other features required of a functional computer.

ARM based[edit]

Other board[edit]

Cortex-M3[edit]

Cortex-M4[edit]

  • MYD-LPC435X EVM for NXP LPC4350/4357 ARM Cortex-M3 microcontrollers designed by MYIR

Freescale i.MX[edit]

OMAP[edit]

  • EPP-Pico-OMAP543 – OMAP5
  • Hawkboard – Low-power OMAP SBC with SATA & VGA out
  • OmapZoom
  • Pandora – Open source game console, using the same Texas Instruments OMAP3530 as the BeagleBoard.

Rabbit/Z80[edit]

  • Rabbit SBC

Signetics 2650[edit]

  • KT-9500 Evaluation board - Signetics 2650 CPU @ 1MHz, 512B of static RAM, ROM monitor and proto area. Max 32KB paged into 4x 8KB blocks.

PC-on-a-stick[edit]

  • Cotton Candy – Low-power Samsung ARM desktop/nettop computer in USB stick format (PC-on-a-stick)
  • MK802China-made computer in PC-on-a-stick format. Based on Allwinner A10.
  • MK808 – China-made dual core PC-on-a-stick. Based on Rockchip RK3066.
  • Gumstix – Overo series, PC-on-a-stick.
  • IGEP COM MODULE – PC-on-a-stick version of IGEPv2 from ISEE
  • UG802 – China-made dual core PC-on-a-stick. Based on Rockchip RK3066.
  • Chromecast - Marvell DE3005-A1, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, HDMI, Linux. 512MB RAM, 2GB flash.

Box[edit]

  • CuBox – Low-power Marvell ARM desktop/nettop computer
  • CuBox-ii.MX 6 Solo/DualLite/Dual/Quad successor of previous CuBox small form factor computer (55mm x 55mm x 42mm)
  • Mele A1000 – Low-power Chinese compact computer using an AllWinner A1X SoC, with 512 MB RAM, HDMI, VGA, ethernet, USB and SATA port sold around $70 with Android 4 but able to run (X/L)ubuntu.[1]
  • Mini Xplus – TV Box H24 based on AllWinner A10, 1 GB RAM, HDMI[2]
  • Ouya – SoC Nvidia Tegra 3
  • SheevaPlug – Marvell Kirkwood 88F6281 (ARM9E)
  • Trim-Slice – SoC Nvidia Tegra 2; predecessor of Utilite
  • Utilite – SoC Freescale i.MX 6 (unspecified single core, dual core, quad core versions announced)

x86 based[edit]

  • fit-PC – AMD Geode LX 800 (fit-PC), Intel Atom Z5xx (fit-PC2), AMD G-Series APU (fit-PC3)
  • MinnowBoard
  • Intel Galileo
  • PC Engines ALIX system boards – miniITX and smaller formfactor, models with and without VGA, AMD Geode LX800 CPU
  • RoBoard based on DMP's Vortex86 processor
  • Rockbochs 'Blackbochs' SBC – AMD Geode LX800 based, includes FXO/FXS telephony connectivity, multiple NICs
  • Soekris system boards – without display connectivity, AMD Geode and Intel Atom CPU
  • Winmate Communication Inc.

PowerPC based[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. "Mele a1000". Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  2. "Mini Xplus TV Box H24". Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  3. "P-Cubed". power.org. 2012-11-06. Retrieved 2014-06-13.

External links[edit]


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