Unless you need specific I/O options that you can't find on an RK3588 SBC, this is just an expensive, oversized SBC. Main use case would be custom embedded solutions. You don't need this to build a NAS. There are cheap options that won't use that much more power, such as an i5-3570S in an old Lenovo mini. Or even just on an old Lenovo H61M board. In spite of only having 4 cores, the 3570S still outperforms the RK3588 in both single and multicore testing to the tune of around 30% more powerful. If you need an NPU, you can just stick a Coral TPU on a PCIe to NVMe adapter. Having PCIe slots opens up plenty of I/O options too, as well as the ability to run a GPU. True power users don't waste money on overpriced hardware when there are cheaper options. The only reason I have an RK3588 SBC is so I could have an ARM based dev machine. Putting it on an ITX board is neither here nor there.
Hi. This sbc can run waydroid on touchscreen monitor connected to usb-c port? I'm pretty curious about android gaming, also steam support via box64. Is possible to run egpu on this computer? Eventually you can compare armbian with arch linux with same desktop?
I just got all exited and thought about getting one, such a fancy shiny new board and a fast ARM CPU on it. I then just so happened to check passmark to see if it outperforms my old shitty test server's 8core ATOM CPU, because I bought that thing in like 2016? and... uh. damn... no. not at all.
trying to remember if you've reviewed any ARM gear that comes with (or can have installed) 10G networking but flipping back through your videos I don't see anything off the top of my head...
Unless you need specific I/O options that you can't find on an RK3588 SBC, this is just an expensive, oversized SBC. Main use case would be custom embedded solutions. You don't need this to build a NAS. There are cheap options that won't use that much more power, such as an i5-3570S in an old Lenovo mini. Or even just on an old Lenovo H61M board. In spite of only having 4 cores, the 3570S still outperforms the RK3588 in both single and multicore testing to the tune of around 30% more powerful. If you need an NPU, you can just stick a Coral TPU on a PCIe to NVMe adapter. Having PCIe slots opens up plenty of I/O options too, as well as the ability to run a GPU.
True power users don't waste money on overpriced hardware when there are cheaper options. The only reason I have an RK3588 SBC is so I could have an ARM based dev machine. Putting it on an ITX board is neither here nor there.
“Ultimate 8k”. Plays 4k with a few skipped frames.
Also...
Title: "Ultimate 8k"
Video: (shows nothing about 8k)
Hi. This sbc can run waydroid on touchscreen monitor connected to usb-c port? I'm pretty curious about android gaming, also steam support via box64. Is possible to run egpu on this computer? Eventually you can compare armbian with arch linux with same desktop?
gpu 슬롯 있으면 좋겠다
What's the deal with the box saying "4x SATA connector 6Gbps" and the Radxa website saying "3x SATA3/PCIe2.1".
It's a bit weird to title the video "Ultimate 8k" while showing literally nothing about 8k.
I just got all exited and thought about getting one, such a fancy shiny new board and a fast ARM CPU on it.
I then just so happened to check passmark to see if it outperforms my old shitty test server's 8core ATOM CPU, because I bought that thing in like 2016? and... uh. damn... no. not at all.
Is any of the software on kernel 6.1?
power user need ecc
trying to remember if you've reviewed any ARM gear that comes with (or can have installed) 10G networking but flipping back through your videos I don't see anything off the top of my head...
Hey can you run any distro ? Normal Debian ARM , trueNas?
Unfortunately you can't install TrueNAS, but yes, Debian image works as well.
@@TechnicallyUnsure thank you
My Lenovo Thinkcentre with an I5 8th gen, was cheaper, more IO and almosylt same power consumption in idle(8w barebone, 17 with 3HDD and 1 SSD).
compared to radxa armrest with amd embedded and dual 10g which is vaporware it is a toy - my initial assessment
that's an x86 board; different class of hardware with more power dissipation etc.
Downvoted for misleading title.
beelink better