▲ | watersb 3 days ago | |||||||
I found 10 Intel Galileo dev kits, new in box, left at our local recycling center on the "Free: Take Me Home" shelf. And just today, I received the Intel Edison dev kit that I'd purchased on eBay. The Galileo is a Quark X1000 SoC, two P54C cores. In-order, original 32-bit Pentium. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Galileo . The Edison is a modern System On Module about the size of an SD card but about 3x the thickness of one. It's far more capable: dual 64-bit Silvermont Atom cores, Super scalar out of order. And an additional Quark core as a system monitor, running an independent RTOS. There's also 4GB eMMC, 1GB RAM, WiFi, and Bluetooth on the module. Its quite a remarkable curiosity. Ten years ago, Intel tried to catch up to ARM in tablets and smartphones, but it was already too late, and this entire segment of Intel was cancelled within a year or two. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Edison Next up is building more recent Linux images for these via the Yocto Project and the now cancelled Intel Board Support Packages (BSP). If you like low power tiny systems, there's a strange amount of fun to be had. | ||||||||
▲ | rbanffy 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> I found 10 Intel Galileo dev kits, new in box, left at our local recycling center on the "Free: Take Me Home" shelf. Looks like an opportunity for a cluster in a picture frame. Did you get them? I have one, a 4 RPI Zero W cluster in an Ikea picture frame: | ||||||||
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