Skip to content

SBC

Single board computer, like raspberry pi, pine64. The heart of your system!

12 Topics 69 Posts
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    130 Views
    A
    Bought some Crucial PCIe Gen4 NVMe M.2 SSD for $46 USD late last November and now in mid Feb, they are now $74. About a 60% increase in three months. And they have dropped a little in price of late. Seems a case of AI computing is vacuuming them all up, plus some players have stopped manufacturing.
  • RPi Alternative: Orange Pi 4 LTS (3GB RAM/16GB eMMC)

    2
    0 Votes
    2 Posts
    2k Views
    toggledbitsT
    UPDATE (Jan 2026) Orange Pi now offers a model 4A in 2GB or 4GB RAM configurations. The new model features an eight-core processor at 1.8Ghz, USB C power only (the DC barrel jack has been removed), an M.2 NVMe SSD (M-key 2280) slot, and eMMC interface (so no more onboard eMMC configurations, apparently, you have to buy an eMMC module separately). The 2GB model can be found for around US$55. eMMC modules are available in 32, 64, and 256GB (64GB is around US$32).
  • RPi Alternative: Orange Pi Zero 2 (1GB)

    3
    1
    2 Votes
    3 Posts
    4k Views
    toggledbitsT
    UPDATE (Jan 2026) The Orange PI Zero 2 1GB is still available from that large, well-known online retailer; current pricing is $39. I have one of these boards in service as my pool interface. Trouble-free, faithful service. The big plus for my particular use is that is has its WiFi on a UFL connector rather than traces-on-board, so I can use an external antenna for better range to the nearest AP in my home. Again, don't confuse this board with the Orange Pi Zero or the Orange Pi Zero 2W, which are different boards.
  • RPi Alternative: Libre Computer AML-S905X-CC "Le Potato" (2GB RAM)

    6
    5 Votes
    6 Posts
    3k Views
    toggledbitsT
    UPDATE — JANUARY 2026 Since this Libre Le Potato board is still a good lower-cost alternative to RPis (especially for running Reactor), I pulled it out and did an update on the OS (Ubuntu 22.04.1). It had been in storage since I wrote the first post in November 2022, so it was... ahem... a little behind. My first attempt at apt update semi-failed because a signature for one repository had changed, so that had to be fixed (easy): wget https://deb.libre.computer/repo/pool/main/libr/libretech-keyring/libretech-keyring_2024.05.19_all.deb dpkg -i libretech-keyring_2024.05.19_all.deb From there, I was able to update the OS as usual. After the update, Ubuntu offered an upgrade to the current 24.04.3 LTS release. In the interest of science, I went for it (do-release-upgrade). That went less well. The system came up, but without networking and ssh access. I had to fix that with a locally-connected HDMI monitor and keyboard by adding (as root) a /etc/netplan/01-netcfg.yaml file as follows: network: version: 2 renderer: networkd ethernets: end0: dhcp4: true Then run (still in a shell as root) netplan apply to bring the network up (you should be able to ping something at that point), and then systemctl enable ssh to re-enable sshd at startup. I then rebooted the unit, and all was well and it was ssh accessible. I then upgraded nodejs to the current v24 LTS, and ran Reactor, no problem. As of this writing, the price of this board at that large, well-known online retailer is around US$45. A heatsink for the CPU may be needed. An upgraded/newer Sweet Potato model AML-S905X-CC-V2 runs about US$60 (with 2GB RAM). Same CPU; changes include heatsink now included/installed, DDR4 RAM, UEFI BIOS, USB C power input (5V/3A), support for a PoE hat, and an eMMC 5.x SM interface. A 16GB eMMC (flash disk) 5.x module is available (same source) for around US$10. Direct OS support includes Debian 13 and Ubuntu 24.04 LTS). Since eMMC 5.x modules are available for the Sweet Potato, I highly recommend it (I wasn't able to find a seller of eMMC 4.x modules compatible with the older Le Potato at this point). MicroSD cards are notoriously failure prone (they're not up to the sustained, frequent writes of general purpose OSs). The NAND flash will do much better and likely be faster. Alternately, you could use an overlay filesystem. Maybe I'll write a post about that separately, if anyone wants to know.
  • Baseline PassMark: Raspberry Pi 4

    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    946 Views
    No one has replied
  • RPi Alternative: ESPRESSObin V7

    3
    1
    2 Votes
    3 Posts
    1k Views
    toggledbitsT
    @a-lurker said in RPi Alternative: ESPRESSObin V7: Looks like the OS problems lets the Espresso down. The OS issue redeemed itself pretty quickly using ARMbian, and after getting comfortable with what I was doing (I hate just typing in commands from a set of instructions), but from the perspective of documentation, I'd have to agree: GlobalScale lets itself down with dated OS images and incomplete instructions. Anyone who would not find that the ARMbian project separately publishes an up-to-date Debian/ARMbian for this board would be really disappointed and may discard or return it. @a-lurker said in RPi Alternative: ESPRESSObin V7: Any sockets for an internal SSD or would the USB 3 socket be taken up with an external SSD? The V7 boards have a SATA port inside. A common complaint about the case is that it leaves almost no room for any SATA drive or module. The SATA connector is vertical on the board, and indeed, the SATA modules I have would all be too tall to fit in the case without chopping a hole in it. But it's there. There's also a Mini PCIe connector, but I can't find any statement that it can be used for storage (I suspect it could, perhaps with work, as detection is more of an kernel/software issue than a hardware issue). USB 3.0 would also be an option. The board has provision for eMMC, and more RAM, but I don't see any models that have it. That may be something they make available when you order a custom lot. Some take a 2 mm central pin and others use a 2.5 mm pin. Indeed! This is a 2.1mm inner.
  • Embedded "in-wall" raspberry screen

    9
    0 Votes
    9 Posts
    5k Views
    therealdbT
    About power. I’m just using a usb cable attached to the Ethernet cable, going back to my rack, where I have a Zwave switch doing 20-80 cycle automatically. I’m using FullyKiosk and it’s http and mqtt api. You can switch it on/off, dim the screen, open apps and pages automatically.
  • Jetson Nano

    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    847 Views
    No one has replied
  • Inconsistent

    8
    0 Votes
    8 Posts
    2k Views
    A
    Not quite sure. However when I set up my 3B+ I had been using it for a couple of weeks with an SD card including z-way. I just made an image with Win32DiskImager of the complete SD and copied it to the SSD and it worked. //ArcherS
  • RPi 2

    5
    0 Votes
    5 Posts
    1k Views
    akbooerA
    Do, please, let us know how you get on!
  • Portable pi power

    Moved
    6
    0 Votes
    6 Posts
    1k Views
    propheadP
    Thanks, ordered
  • PSA upgrade your Pi’s to ssd

    Moved
    23
    1 Votes
    23 Posts
    8k Views
    DesTD
    [image: 1588515743721-cafb8479-519d-4168-bb25-35c899c0ba0b-image.png] @CatmanV2 here's the Resources on my Pi Zero W

Recent Topics