List of single-board computers - computers built on a single circuit board, with microprocessor(s), memory, input/output (I/O) and other features required of a functional computer.
ARM based
Board
AllWinner A1X
A13-OLinuXino - Low cost, Open Hardware, AllWinner A13, with 512MB
Cubieboard — Open hardware compact motherboard using Allwinner A1X SoC, with 1 GB of RAM.
Gooseberry — Low-power AllWinner A1X, with 512 MB RAM & HDMI output
Hackberry — Low-power AllWinner A1X, with 1 GB RAM & HDMI output[1]
ARM9, ARM11
iMX233-OLinuXino - Open Hardware, Freescale i.MX233 454 MHz, 64 MB RAM
FOXG20
FriendlyARM — Family of boards supporting touchscreens
Rascal
VIA APC [2]
Raspberry Pi
Cortex-M3
Arduino Due
mbed microcontroller - ARM Cortex-M3
Freescale i.MX
SABRE Lite — i.MX 6 Quad
Nitrogen6X — i.MX 6 Quad
Wandboard Solo, Dual — i.MX 6
OMAP
BeagleBoard — Predecessor of the PandaBoard. Cortex-A8 CPU
BeagleBoard-xM — Improved version, faster CPU and more memory
BeagleBone — Low-Cost version of BeagleBoard xM
Hawkboard — Low-power OMAP SBC with SATA & VGA out
IGEPv2
OmapZoom
Pandora — Open source game console, using the same Texas Instruments OMAP3530 as the BeagleBoard.
PandaBoard — Successor of the BeagleBoard, with faster CPU, more memory, and 1080p video
Samsung Exynos
Arndale Board — Exynos 5 Dual
ODROID-PC — Exynos 4 Dual
ODROID-X, ODROID-X2, ODROID-U, ODROID-U2 — Exynos 4 Quad development board[3]
Origenboard[4] - Exynos 4 Dual, Quad development board, Official Samsung reference board for Linaro
Snapdragon
DragonBoard — Snapdragon S4 Plus
ST-Ericsson NovaThor
Snowball — ST-Ericsson Nova A9500
Xilinx Zynq
Parallella - Dual-Core Cortex-A9, with 16 or 64 core Epiphany co-processor
PC-on-a-stick
See also: PC-on-a-stick
Cotton Candy - Low-power Samsung ARM desktop/nettop computer in USB stick format (PC-on-a-stick)
MK802 - China-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.
UG802 - China-made dual core PC-on-a-stick. Based on Rockchip RK3066.
Box
CuBox — Low-power Marvell ARM desktop/nettop computer
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.[5]
SheevaPlug
Trim-Slice
Mini Xplus - TV Box H24 based on AllWinner A10, 1 GB RAM, HDMI[6]
[edit]x86 based
PC Engines ALIX system boards — miniITX and smaller formfactor, models with and without VGA, AMD Geode LX800 CPU
Soekris system boards - without display connectivity, AMD Geode and Intel Atom CPU
Winmate Communication Inc.
References
^ "Hackberry A10 developer board". Retrieved September 28, 2012.
^ "Technical Details for VAI APC 8750". Retrieved June 13, 2012.
^ "Open Exynos4 Quad Mobile Development Platform". Retrieved July 15, 2012.
^ ORIGENBOARD.org
^ "Mele a1000". Retrieved November 20, 2012.
^ "Mini Xplus TV Box H24". Retrieved November 20, 2012.
[edit]See also
Single-board microcontroller
List of Arduino compatibles
[edit]External links
http://elinux.org/RaspberryPi_Comparison - Comparison