Orange Pi 3 H6: An updated version of the Raspberry Pi competitor that starts at US$29.90
Following the recent RAM upgrade for the Orange Pi, Shenzhen Xunlong Software has released the Orange Pi 3 H6, a new version of its single-board computer. The Raspberry Pi competitor is equipped with an Allwinner H6 SoC that integrates four ARM Cortex A53 cores that clock up to 1.8 GHz and an ARM Mali-T720 GPU. The SoC is complemented with 1 GB or 2 GB of LPDDR3 RAM depending on the model purchased and 8 GB of eMMC flash storage. There are also two versions with no pre-installed storage.
All four models are otherwise equally equipped though. The Orange Pi 3 H6 has an HDMI 2.0a port, a Composite video output and a 3.5 mm jack. There is also a Gigabit Ethernet port and a Wi-Fi module that supports up to IEEE 802.11 ac and Bluetooth 5.0. Moreover, Shenzhen Xunlong Software has equipped the device with four USB 3.0 Type-A ports, one USB 2.0 port and a TF card slot.
$30-40.
Previously: The New 64-bit Orange Pi is a Quad-core Computer for $20
(Score: 2) by driverless on Wednesday January 23 2019, @03:31AM (1 child)
The Orange Pi is a bit of a swing and a miss, the H6 is sort of halfway between a low-end Arm64 (Pi) and a high-end one (anything with an RK3399). So it's competing with things like the Pine64 (which has been around for ages and costs about the same, but with far better support) and NanoPi K2. If you want something more powerful, the RK3399 devices start at about $65 for a NanoPi M4. OK, it costs a few dollars more, so I'll skip a few cups of coffee and make up the difference - unless you're deploying hundreds or thousands of them at once, going for the cheapest device you can get is false economy.
Another thing to consider with these is software support. I don't want to spend several days hacking up custom kernels or downloading something from virusbucket.ru (is it Orange that distribute their firmware via Mega links? One of the Arm-devices vendors does this), I just want to drop the firmware on an eMMC (no, not an SD card, eMMC) and have it work out of the box. Odroid are good for that, you just order the ready-to-run eMMC when you order the rest of the hardware.
(Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Friday January 25 2019, @02:06PM
Worrisome download sites are OK if you have an independent checksum you can use to verify noncorruption before your machine does anything with it..