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..OR , for a rather more money at $199
--the dual core 1.2Ghz cotton candy?
http://store.cstick.com/cotton-candy.html
--i wouldn't bite at that price, maybe if they can knock $60+ off
or more budget MK802 with single core 1.5ghz @ $74 http://www.engadget.com/2012/05/18/mk802-beats-cotton-candy-to-mark... , now at the Pi-like price of ~$50 on ebay.
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Off topic but just upgraded my sheevaplug to ubifs debian squeeze after bricking it, god bless jtag ports. and then installed subsonic.war under tomcat6/oracle embedded(ARMv5 headless)java1.7.0_06
and my 1.2ghz arm sheevaplug (after a night indexing) is now happily serving a 1TB music library(attached via usb NTFS-3G/FUSE) to several simultaneous clients over my home network and to mobile client apps over the internet. -I'm amazed what can do with literally just a few watts of cpu power these days..
I'm absolutely loving the small computing revolution! My long term goal is to be "x86 free" for general computing, not for any philosophical or moral reasons but for practicality. Ironically, my last holdout will probably be my ~1999 AMD Duron system that currently serves as both a native BeOS 5.0 Pro workstation and a Windows 98 classic gaming system. Once Haiku goes beta or release on ARM (yes, I'm aware that could be many years from now) I'll look at chucking that dinosaur for good.
I also want to break into the microcontroller world beyond the simple tinkering I've done with TI kits, but that's purely hobby stuff and can wait until I've gone down to one employer.





Member since:
2005-06-29
Well, I certainly will! I think a Raspberry Pi 512MB version overclocked to 1GHz running Haiku-ARM would be nice.
The BeagleBoard-XM also meets those specs, and uses a newer ARM chip that might be easier to target. There's also the PandaBoard if you want even more power.