The Geniatech XPI-7110 is a single-board PC the size of a credit card that bears more than a passing resemblance to a Raspberry Pi: it has a shape, size, and set of ports and connectors, giving it a Raspberry Pi compatible with 40. GPIO pin header.
What sets the XPI-7110 apart is its processor. Instead of an ARM chip, this little computer has a StarFive JH7110 processor on the RISC-V architecture.
This chip has been around for a few years and has been used in StarFive, Milk-V, Pine64, and Framework products, among others.
It has 4 cores of 64-bit RISC-V SiFive U74 processor with speeds up to 1 GHz and Imagination BXE-4-32 graphics.
The card has 2GB to 8GB of LPDDR4 memory and comes with 16GB to 256GB of eMMC flash storage.
The Geniatech XPI-7110 measures 3. 3″ x 2. 2″ x 56mm and has a port array that includes:
There are also MIPI-DSI and MIPI-CSI connectors for presentations and cameras, an IR receiver that can be used for remote controls, and aids for WiFi and Bluetooth. It comes with support for Debian Linux, I suspect that users will also be able to install Ubuntu or other GNU/Linux distributions that have added support for the JH7110 processor and other RISC-V chips.
Geniatech has not announced when it will start promoting the XPI-7110 or how much it will cost. But while some corporations operating in this sector target hobbyists and enthusiasts, Geniatech’s products are designed for advertising and advertising applications. Therefore, the company notes that this single-board PC has an expected life cycle of more than 10 years.
LinuxGizmos press release
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It looks good. RISC-V is smart and the (miserable) days of ARM are coming to an end. I’m glad that the Snapdragon X “PCs” (if you can call them that) are failing badly.
The lower end models sell in tons, so I don’t know how it “failed”. And there is no difference between ARM and RISC-V for consumers, since to do anything more than fundamental text editing, the CPU wants to use licensed IP cores: video codecs, GPUs, etc. The only beneficiary will be China, which will reduce the bills to ARM. And I have even less trouble adding spyware to the CPU design. Comments like this remind me most of the “supporters” who now lead around campuses with flags, until they get stabbed by the other people they support.
This looks like a blank board design. . . from a hardware perspective, it looks very promising.
It may be attractive to have a RISC-V formula in the form of RPi. However, it will be difficult to live up to the simple experience of the Raspberry Pi operating system. I don’t see anything to indicate that the SiHive U74 is affected by Ghostwrite, that’s a plus.
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