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  • raspberry_pi
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Related

Pi vs BeagleBone-Black

Former Member
Former Member over 12 years ago

So, just over a year on from the initial availability of the R-Pi and the new BeagleBone Black is upon us.  They've obviously taken a leaf out of the RPF's playbook and produced a cost reduced version at a price only marginally above the Pi.

 

I find it interesting that the compromises are very different, for example there's a proper PMIC and the ethernet is not troubled by being connected to USB, however the on-board HDMI seems less capable.

 

Other differences are in the documentation, I'm currently viewing the pcb gerbers for the beaglebone..  Have yet to see any sign of those for the R-Pi a year later. There's even an up to date devicetree capable kernel too.

 

Technology has also moved on somewhat, we get a 1GHz Cortex A8 which is better than the Pi, along with various other stuff and lots more GPIO's too.

 

Ok, so it's clear that I like the look of the new beaglebone, and given the price I'm likely to put any further R-Pi plans on hold until I have a chance to play with this. It's also making things like the Olinuxino-maxi I bought recently look very slow/expensive while still being cheaper than the similarly specced Olinuxino-A13

 

Some details of the beaglebone-black here http://circuitco.com/support/index.php?title=BeagleBoneBlack

 

What do the rest of you think ?   I don't expect this to displace the Pi anytime soon, but I expect it to be very attractive to those people who don't simply want to put XBMC on it and duct tape it to the back of the TV..

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  • johnbeetem
    johnbeetem over 12 years ago

    BBone Black is very impressive.  Only US$10 more than RasPi at mouser.com (can't find price at element14/Newark).  I'm looking forward to seeing one at Design West tomorrow.

     

    I also noticed today that they've done a major revamp of the http://beagleboard.org/ web site.  It looks like it will be much easier to download operating systems.  Previously it was hard to tell which version was recommended -- RasPi made it quite a bit easier for a new user to get started.

     

    I don't think BBone Black will displace RasPi, because RasPi is still cheaper (especially the Model A) and has a very effective community.  BBone has higher CPU performance, but RasPi probably has better media performance since that's what the BCM2835 was designed for, so people who just want a media engine will prefer it.  But BBone has much better I/O capabilities (clearly now a better choice for geeks*) and has rounded corners so it actually fits in an Altoids tin image  And BBone has a full Technical Reference manual.

     

    * I use the definition of "geek" that requires hardware expertise: "you can't spell geek without EE".

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  • johnbeetem
    johnbeetem over 12 years ago

    BBone Black is very impressive.  Only US$10 more than RasPi at mouser.com (can't find price at element14/Newark).  I'm looking forward to seeing one at Design West tomorrow.

     

    I also noticed today that they've done a major revamp of the http://beagleboard.org/ web site.  It looks like it will be much easier to download operating systems.  Previously it was hard to tell which version was recommended -- RasPi made it quite a bit easier for a new user to get started.

     

    I don't think BBone Black will displace RasPi, because RasPi is still cheaper (especially the Model A) and has a very effective community.  BBone has higher CPU performance, but RasPi probably has better media performance since that's what the BCM2835 was designed for, so people who just want a media engine will prefer it.  But BBone has much better I/O capabilities (clearly now a better choice for geeks*) and has rounded corners so it actually fits in an Altoids tin image  And BBone has a full Technical Reference manual.

     

    * I use the definition of "geek" that requires hardware expertise: "you can't spell geek without EE".

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to johnbeetem

    John Beetem wrote:

     

    BBone Black is very impressive.  Only US$10 more than RasPi at mouser.com (can't find price at element14/Newark).  I'm looking forward to seeing one at Design West tomorrow.

     

    here in the UK, 26.48 GBP for the model B Pi, 27.87 for the beaglebone black - both plus VAT (20% here) or whatever local tax is.

     

    I don't think BBone Black will displace RasPi, because RasPi is still cheaper (especially the Model A) and has a very effective community.  BBone has higher CPU performance, but RasPi probably has better media performance since that's what the BCM2835 was designed for, so people who just want a media engine will prefer it. 

    For me it's not enough cheaper though, so I'm not really in the media engine group image  I don't know enough about the BB community at this point, but I suspect the community will grow with a cheaper device that has lots more IO

    And BBone has a full Technical Reference manual.

     

    The docs are quite impressive, especially so early on.

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