Thursday, April 20th 2017
ASUS Brings "Tinker Board" Raspberry Pi 3 Competitor to North America
ASUS is bringing its higher-performing Raspberry Pi 3 competitor, the "Tinker Board" to markets in North America. Priced at a nice easy 54.99, ASUS touts the machines horsepower as being nearly double that of a Raspberry Pi 3 and says it is "capable of powering all of your projects from robots to media boxes to coding machine for budding programmers."
The machine's specifications are certainly more capable than a Raspberry Pi 3, and being it is Linux based there will certainly be a plethora of community support for this device. Interestingly enough, Android Support is a bit behind (being only on Marshmallow at the moment), but ASUS has a pledge for Nougat support in place.
Specifications are listed below, and I have also kindly provided a link to the products amazon page for those interested.
www.amazon.com/dp/B06VSBVQWS/PS: Yes, I am aware this is not exactly "PC Hardware" but I felt enough of us might have some use for a cheap Single Board Computer to find this interesting.
Source:
HotHardware
The machine's specifications are certainly more capable than a Raspberry Pi 3, and being it is Linux based there will certainly be a plethora of community support for this device. Interestingly enough, Android Support is a bit behind (being only on Marshmallow at the moment), but ASUS has a pledge for Nougat support in place.
Specifications are listed below, and I have also kindly provided a link to the products amazon page for those interested.
www.amazon.com/dp/B06VSBVQWS/PS: Yes, I am aware this is not exactly "PC Hardware" but I felt enough of us might have some use for a cheap Single Board Computer to find this interesting.
34 Comments on ASUS Brings "Tinker Board" Raspberry Pi 3 Competitor to North America
Having said that, the spec is definitely better. I wonder power consumption though.
I suppose if you want a canned system that could be a legit concern.
www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/asus-unveils-the-tinkerboard-to-rival-raspberry-pi-and-intel-edison.230999/
Preliminary reviews from february:
hackaday.com/2017/02/15/review-the-asus-tinker-board/
geektimes.ru/post/284976/
The board is completely uninteresting, except for its more or less adequate iGPU.
Other than that, it is hot, expensive, outdated.
I'm talking about more "tinker-oriented" products like Odrioid, NanoPi, Cubieboard, OrangePi etc.
At same or much lower price you get twice the performance and a lot more features (not just Pi with a better CPU).
Officially it launched in US on January 30th, but only hit the shelves a month later, on February 26-28th.
What's even worse, is that besides Amazon no one really seems to care about this board at this point (not even ASUS themselves).
It is incompatible with everything... closed source will kill it.
Right now we have excellent cheap options if you want more power than the PI...
You get an odroid... they start around the same price and probably blow this lil asus board out of the water.
they are pure garbage
they blatantly disregard the gpl and there chip are crapola
i see it is for programmers.
Hawent tested alot linux mint mybe its beter than windows spying,
Rockchip SOC's have always performed very well at their price-point and competitively compared to everything else. I have several rk3288 based devices and each of them runs very well. Three tablets and a TV box. This SBC is going to be a ton of fun for the people who buy them.
And for the record, Rockchip has been accused of violating GPL, but it was never proven because the code is open for inspection. Please stop spreading false rumors. It's very childish. Also incorrect information. The Android & rk3288 based devices I own will show 4k30 with ANY app that supports the format, including the MKV files I play on them. Rockchip's code is NOT required. And there are MANY custom roms for the rk3288 SOC which make use of optimized Mali drivers so making a smooth running rom for this SBC will present little challenge. By your metric of qualification, the RPi3 is even more uninteresting and outdated. So your argument is a bit self-defeating. The GPU has better performance, but the CPU is also much improved over the RPi3. It's all about perspective. Compared to the RPi3 this SBC is a big improvement. The support is there and growing. The software side of things will come. The thing is brand new and in 6 months there will be a very good level of OS and software support.
and yes they do violate the gpl they don't provide kernel source or rom source for reference when when asked you get no reply
the roms and drivers are always compete and utter trash because there is no sources to work with and whatever offbrand device you get with one of these god aweful chips in it you are likely to get no support
been there done that NO
you can do better for the money e.g a ODROID c2
there is nothing about rockchip that is good period buy something sensible that works and you get real support on
You got one point right. ODroid SBC's are very good and well supported. But those have been around for a while and the company/community support exists for them.
TinkerBoard is less than 6 months old. ASUS was aiming to bring an alternative to the RPi form-factor market. I think they've done well! And as soon as someone releases an Android rom for it, I'll be buying one.
...and there are no "optimized drivers", since they are all based on the same set of binary blobs from ARM....