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posted by martyb on Tuesday February 25 2020, @11:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the who-remembers-when-a-mini-computer-was-the-size-of-only-three-large-refrigerators? dept.

China's Zhaoxin CPU Is in Its First Mini-PC

Networking specialist Ruijie Networks on Tuesday launched its first mini-PC featuring China's homegrown Zhaoxin KaiXian KX-U6780A processor.

[...] The RG-CT7800 takes the form of a 2.4-liter, black chassis. The device features a custom motherboard for the KaiXian KX-U6780A, since the processor is ball grid array-based. The motherboard comes with two SO-DIMM DDR4 RAM slots too.

[...] Ruijie Networks offers the RG-CT7800 with 8GB of DDR4 memory and a 256GB SSD. One of the product images show the device with what appears to be four USB 2.0 ports and two 3.5mm jacks for heaphones and microphones. It's unclear what other ouputs are on the RG-CT7800.

The RG-CT7800 is compatible with the Chinese-developed UOS (Unity Operating System) and NeoKylin operating systems, which are both based on Linux. Ruijie Networks has made the necessary software modifications so that the RG-CT7800 can run streaming software and office suites, such as Kingsoft WPS Office and Yongzhong Office. The mini-PC also supports a bunch of peripherals, including Pantum printers, CZUR document scanners, digital drawing tablets and bar code scanners.

KaiXian KX-U6780A is a "high-end" 8-core x86-64 CPU from Zhaoxin, a joint venture between Via Technologies and the Chinese government. Any way you measure it, performance is relatively low, but that is not the point:

According to GeekBench, the Zhaoxin KX-U6780A comes in at a 1910 on single core score and a 8670 on a multi core score. This is roughly comparable to a modern high-end Intel Atom, or 2012 era four-core Intel Core i5-3550U.

However, where this gets interesting is how it fits into China's "3-5-2" plan. This is Beijing's mandate to wean China's public sector off foreign technology. By the end of 2020, 30% of the technology infrastructure needs to be domestic, while by the end of 2021 this number jumps to 50%, while the remaining 20% would need to be replaced by the end of 2022. The RG-CT7800 -- while technically unremarkable -- will be a perfect cog in the machine for this plan.


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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Wednesday February 26 2020, @01:07AM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Wednesday February 26 2020, @01:07AM (#962635) Journal

    Maybe they'll be available on Alibaba. But these probably aren't intended for the Western markets and more attention should be paid to its successors.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhaoxin [wikipedia.org]

    This is the KX-6000 series on TSMC's "16nm" process. The next one will be the KX-7000 series on a "7nm" process. It says "2019 (planned)" in the table but I think they will launch in 2021 to coincide with availability of DDR5.

    They may be looking to replace TSMC with SMIC [wikipedia.org] eventually.

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