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Single-Board Computers
Forum EOMA68 crowdsupply campaign starting tomorrow, 28th june 2016
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  • Replies 15 replies
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  • allwinner-a20
  • sbc
  • eoma68
  • crowdsupply
  • laptop
  • microdesktop
Related

EOMA68 crowdsupply campaign starting tomorrow, 28th june 2016

Former Member
Former Member over 5 years ago

hi folks after the discussion came up a while ago here on element14 about EOMA68 i thought you might appreciate knowing that the crowdfunding campaign will start tomorrow and run for two months.  i have a heck of a lot to do so here are a couple of links http://crowdsupply.com/eoma68 and http://rhombus-tech.net/crowdsupply/ - we'll have a micro-desktop housing, a 15.6in laptop housing and a computer card with 2gb RAM, 8gb NAND and an Allwinner A20 dual-core ARM Cortex A7 running at 1.2ghz.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago

    woo, lots going on   haven't stopped writing answers to questions since we launched yesterday.  feel free if you have any questions, ask away.

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Hi Luke,

     

    I wanted to see the schematics, and I see an a31 folder but no a20 folder, and a file called "EOMA68_A31.pdf" however it is dated 2013 and labelled Allwinner Technology Co Ltd.

    Is that the correct PDF, or should I be looking at a different one?

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to shabaz

    it's probably in the A10 folder.... the CPU Card itself isn't the thing you need to be looking at though (except out of curiosity or if you want to ignore the standard, which you can do), the *other side* though - where you'd want to make your own base boards, that's much more interesting.  hmmm... looking around news i'll need to take a look.

     

    what is it exactly that you'd like to see?

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Hi Luke,

     

    I see a link that says:

    • EOMA68-A20 Schematics and PDFs contains the complete set of datasheets for the EOMA68-A20 Computer Card

    but it goes to a location where I can see many files, but not the A20 Computer Card or A10 folder.

     

    I wanted to see the schematic to learn more about the product that will be supplied. Also I don't want to end up with a paperweight if the overall project ceases and any forums die one day, i.e. the schematics will allow me to continue to benefit from the Computer Card when there is no technical support. . The page states that it is available, but I can't find it. Is there a precise URL that I may be missing for the PDF schematics?

     

    Just as an example I recently contributed to the Lime SDR funding campaign but I didn't do so until I had examined its schematics and then the main component datasheet and register examination, so I could see precisely what it featured for the sum of funds demanded. I was satisfied I would be able to make use of it and that it was worthwhile so I contributed accordingly.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to shabaz

    cool, great!  ok i'll fire up the VM and generate a PDF, it's been so busy i've not had time to keep everything up-to-date, but the EOMA68-A20 CPU Card is the one exception where, to ensure that the investment is recovered and that manufacturing is not disrupted by third party suppliers, i'm *not* releasing the full schematics and PCB files... yet.  which is why you haven't been able to find them uploaded, there. a PDF of the schematics, not a problem.  give me a mo.  btw please bear in mind, this will be the one with four 8x DDR3 RAM ICs, and i'll be doing a redesign to use two 16x DDR3 ICs - it's a lower-cost layout.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    okay!  so, i created an a20 directory http://hands.com/~lkcl/eoma/allwinner/a20 - the PDF schematic's there for review.  background: we had an extremely competent engineer (one of wits-tech's absolute best) put that together initially, and i've been maintaining it since, having taught myself how to do PCB CAD over the past four years.  some of the pages (page 1-4 for example) are a leetle out-of-date, but you get the general idea.  you can actually find schematic PDFs of various tablets around: they will look reaally similar, also if you compare to the cubieboard schematics they will look *really* similar

     

    page 5 is DDR3 connectivity (and power) for the A20

     

    page 6 is general A20 GPIO, JTAG, and other peripherals such as HDMI, NAND, SPI, SD/MMC etc.

     

    page 7 is the AXP209 Power Management IC

     

    page 8 is some of the SOT23-5 and SOT-23-6 discrete PMICs needed (1.5v, 3.3v, 2.5v)

     

    page 9 is pull-ups, XTALs, all stuff that needs to right next to the A20

     

    page 10 is the 4x DDR3 8-bit RAM ICs (to be replaced with 2x DDR3 16-bit)

     

    page 11 is the NAND IC, Micro SD/MMC card connector and Micro-USB-OTG

     

    page 12 is the HDMI connector PLEASE NOTE: the RTL8201 has been REMOVED

     

    page 13 is the EOMA68 connector, bless 'im our engineer who made this didn't speak very good english, he left it as "LCD", i just haven't had time to rename it

     

    basically it's incredibly similar to the cubieboard, just less busy because EOMA68 is a simple standard.  it should be clear though that the actual important stuff is the EOMA68 connector and the other connectors... *not* the actual processor, RAM or NAND.  you've looked at some of the other PDF files (for the A31 for example) so that should be clear: they're all the same EOMA68 connector.  the only exception to this would be if you needed to *NOT* conform to the EOMA68 standard.  for example, you noticed that one of the pins on the EOMA68 connector had some other multiplexed functionality by going over the A20 datasheet, and that was something that you specifically wanted to use, and were happy to be making your own baseboard that wasn't compliant with the EOMA68 specification.

     

    why would that be beneficial?  well, the plan here is to ramp up to mass-volume, so that these end up being sold in best-buy, walmart, staples and other supermarkets, at really *really* competitive prices.  "just go buy an upgrade computer card" like you would say "just go buy a bigger memory card".

     

    what *that* means is that as an engineer you could literally walk into a supermarket and buy their entire stock of computer cards to fulfil a tight customer deadline!  but not with something that has bits sticking out of it at least 12mm high: the component clearance on the EOMA68-A20 is only about 4mm.

     

    anyway - hope that helps, i leave to you it.

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Hi Luke,

     

    Excellent, thanks. However I currently get a 'permission denied' message, I think the file or folder may need changed permissions:

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to shabaz

    doh! sorry  - sorted   used rsync to copy it up, it often sets permissions to rw-------.    

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    found a comparable cubieboard set of schematics http://dl.cubieboard.org/hardware/cubieboard_schematic_2012-08-08.pdf

     

    also there's a maaassive set of resources here http://docs.cubieboard.org/resources

     

    many of which will be relevant because it's the exact same processor, memory layout (planned) - i often run the cb2 images and kernels directly on the EOMA68-A20 with little or no modifications.

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 5 years ago in reply to Former Member

    I'm afraid I've given up. I tried accessing the new URL, and I see this:

    Besides, the URL states they are August 2012 schematics.. Is the project really using 4-year old technology?

    A major benefit of your project is supposed to be freely available 'everything'. But I feel I'm getting fobbed off with schematics dated 2013 according to the title block (despite the file name containing the number 2014) of the previous link you supplied (Index of /~lkcl/eoma/allwinner/a20 )

    Where are the PDF schematics to the actual board, or the current revision board, in PDF format?

     

    If they are not going to be available to users, that's alright, it is your choice, and I wouldn't have tried looking for the schematics. I only looked because it was stated that they were available, and a key part of your project are the statements like the ones below, and it was merely prudent to examine first before potentially funding. If I misunderstood and they are not to be made available just yet, then I apologise. But I feel it could have been made clearer right from the start.

     

     

    "

    • Truly Free: Everything is freely licensed

    "

    "we will NEVER compromise on our commitment to libre principles: you will always be able to repair your own EOMA68 devices by 3D printing replacement casework parts; you will always have access to the source code and the PCB CAD files"

     

    "Many projects claim a degree of “open-ness”, using the word “open” in order to attract users and developers, but a simple in-depth investigation of such projects quickly reveals the claim of “open-ness” to be misleading or outright false."

     

    "A commitment to being fully Libre is a critical strategic part of this project. We are working with the FSF to apply for RYF Certification of the Libre Tea Computer Card for example, but are also going way beyond that by providing full CAD files, schematics, and datasheets for all the parts (without NDAs) as well as having the 3D CAD files for the casework as a completely open GPLv3+ licensed project right from its inception."

     

    "

    • EOMA68-A20 Schematics and PDFs contains the complete set of datasheets for the EOMA68-A20 Computer Card

    "

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