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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 in reply to morgaine

    Morgaine Dinova wrote:

     

    coder27 wrote:

     

    I think the details are still unclear about the BBB's usability for home theatre.

     

    How welll it will perform in that role remains to be seen, but one thing is absolutely crystal clear.  It was not designed for that purpose, so if it works well as a media centre it will be as a lucky side effect of providing a working X11 desktop or Arduino UI. (*)

     

    I've now read about half of the BBB System Reference Manual, and they make it abundantly clear that the board was developed to support engineers, technical enthusiasts, makers, and educators+students.  Reading between the lines, and from interacting with the BB community directly, there is considerable {concern,hostility,apathy} towards those that jumped on the Pi educational bandwagon purely because they wanted a cheap media centre.  The views vary of course, but I think it's safe to say that nobody considers the BBB to be a media centre platform, even if it works.

     

    That area still belongs entirely to the Pi, and any competition for media centre eyeballs is unlikely to be coming from the BB stable.

     

    Morgaine.

     

    (*) PS. Lucky side effects are not impossible.  BBB has been shown running Quake 3.

    BBone has a powerful 3D graphics engine.  I don't know how it compares to RasPi -- I hear opinions about RasPi's being better but haven't seen any independent benchmarks.  So BBone is great for synthesizing graphical images.  Now for decoding purchased (or not) video content or video encoding, it's probably true that RasPi is better, but "those frills cost money" -- you may have to purchase licenses for the RasPi Codecs.

     

    Regarding {concern,hostility,apathy}, my own feeling is mostly "pity" as in "here you have a pretty decent GNU/Linuix box and you just want to watch silly videos?"  My chief annoyance with "RasPi as naked Roku2" users is that they made it really hard to get a RasPi when it first came out.  OTOH, those "other users" help drive the price down, which benefits everyone in the long run.  As a free-as-in-freedom proponent, I want to be able to use hardware I buy for whatever I want so I must support the right for others to do the same.

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  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to johnbeetem

    John Beetem wrote:

     

    Regarding {concern,hostility,apathy}, my own feeling is mostly "pity" as in "here you have a pretty decent GNU/Linuix box and you just want to watch silly videos?"

     

    I haven't detected "pity", so I'll add yours to the list. image

     

    I have noticed a fair bit of ridicule too, although I don't think any of the above 4 accounts for it.  It seems to stem from simple peergroup reinforcement, blowing raspberries at "that other lot" not for any solid reasons but to sound cool in company.  Unfortunately IRC seems to encourage it.  I think it's softened a bit now compared to 9-12 months ago, possibly because a large number of BB owners now have Pi boards too.

     

    I like all the boards, they all have a specific niche where they shine.  Pi-B's niche is narrowing now though.

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  • johnbeetem
    johnbeetem over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    Morgaine Dinova wrote:

     

    Pi-B's niche is narrowing now though.

    Indubitably.  When BBone was US$89 plus US$50 for a DVI-D card the combination was 4X a RasPi model B.  Now it's just 30% more (US$45 versus US$35).  If you're a teenager, that's a lot fewer cars to wash or lawns to mow.  Teen geeks should charge more for resetting digital clocks after power failures.

     

    IMO BBone Black is the clear winner for a maker.  RasPi is IMO still better for a newbie mostly interested in software or very simple hardware.

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  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to johnbeetem

    John Beetem wrote:

     

    When BBone was US$89 plus US$50 for a DVI-D card the combination was 4X a RasPi model B.  Now it's just 30% more (US$45 versus US$35).

     

    For the basic package prices, sure.  But these prices don't reflect the actual investment needed before you can use the boards.  For BBB you need nothing more at all if you use it tethered to a PC, because it has the O/S preloaded in the eMMC device, comes with a USB cable, and appears as a USB storage device as well as being powered through the cable.  Pull it out of the box, plug it in, it works --- instant gratification.

     

    The Pi doesn't come with any leads, and can't be used in that tethered mode, and doesn't come with an SD card anyway, so you can't use it in BBB's "minimum investment" mode.  To compare working systems fairly, you have to add to the price of the Pi a PSU (or at least a USB lead) and an SD card, and the gratification is not instant because the newbie "hurdle" of writing the SD card still has to be overcome.  Viewed that way, the Pi model B isn't cheaper than the BBB, it's either the same or more expensive, depending on the quality of accessories you buy.  For beginners, it's also a lot more hassle, and that's assuming that the  PSU and SD card that the newbie buys will actually work with the idiosyncratic little board, which is far from certain.

     

    So, I don't think that "cheaper" is actually correct for Pi unless viewed very narrowly, since it won't run as supplied.  And "easier" is debateable too.  Pi is the clear leader as a media centre.  In all other applications, it now has one direct and very able competitor, as well as a swarm of others just outside its price niche.

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  • gdstew
    gdstew over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    I like all the boards, they all have a specific niche where they shine.  Pi-B's niche is narrowing now though.

     

    The intended R-Pi market was always very narrowly defined (very low cost computer used to teach kids about computers). The RPF vastly underestimated its

    "geek appeal" and this is the primary reason sales took off to levels well beyond the RPFs original expectations. I don't think that will last but due to that popularity

    it has actually increased its niche to cover several other areas, using it HD video applications is probably one that it is better suited for. The  availability of a HD

    video camea will also help here. Its success and fierce competition in the SOC markets will probably create direct competitors and it will have to keep improving

    to stay ahead of them. Something I'm not sure a non-profit organization can do.

     

    The BB Black is aimed at completely different market. It is a more general purpose platform with a large number of multi-purpose I/O pins available and aimed

    primarily at computer professionals. Its more general purpose nature give it a much wider range of possible applications right from the start. There is a lot of hardware

    crossover between the two but this is true on almost every modern ARM SOCs since they almost all include a long list of the same features.

     

    From John Beetum:

     

    BBone has a powerful 3D graphics engine.  I don't know how it compares to RasPi -- I hear opinions about RasPi's being better but haven't seen any independent benchmarks.  So BBone is great for synthesizing graphical images.  Now for decoding purchased (or not) video content or video encoding, it's probably true that RasPi is better, but "those frills cost money" -- you may have to purchase licenses for the RasPi Codecs.


    It is definitely much better than the GPU in the R-Pi. The main drawback I see for the BB Black as far as video goes is the 16 bit memory data bus vs 32 bit for the Pi. Both share

    the RAM with the ARM core and the GPU, and video applications require RAM access for display as well as display data processing so it is hard to see how this would not have

    a negative impact on the BB Black in most video applications. I pretty sure the R-Pi can also play Quake Three but I'm not sure what market this helps either of them with.

     

    Does TI already have a license for the codecs ? Otherwise they would have to be bought to use them for the BB Black too.

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

    > The intended R-Pi market was always very narrowly defined (very low cost computer used to teach kids about computers).

     

    Education was the stated goal of the RPF, but not necessarily their marketing focus prior to

    the yet-to-be-released educational release.  I see a lot more marketing effort focused on

    Maker Faire venues than educational venues.   Early on, they hired an educational person,

    but quickly let her go without a replacement until recently.

     

    > The main drawback I see for the BB Black as far as video goes is the 16 bit memory data bus vs 32 bit for the Pi.

     

    I think you also need to consider memory caches and data paths.

    On the RPi, the cpu has to go through the gpu to access memory and cache.

    I suspect the BBB has a better caching system.   There are memory benchmarks

    that might be useful, such as

     

    http://lmbench.sourceforge.net/

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

    coder27 wrote:

     

    > The intended R-Pi market was always very narrowly defined (very low cost computer used to teach kids about computers).

     

    Education was the stated goal of the RPF, but not necessarily their marketing focus prior to

    the yet-to-be-released educational release.  I see a lot more marketing effort focused on

    Maker Faire venues than educational venues.   Early on, they hired an educational person,

    but quickly let her go without a replacement until recently.

     

    > The main drawback I see for the BB Black as far as video goes is the 16 bit memory data bus vs 32 bit for the Pi.

     

    I think you also need to consider memory caches and data paths.

    On the RPi, the cpu has to go through the gpu to access memory and cache.

    I suspect the BBB has a better caching system.   There are memory benchmarks

    that might be useful, such as

     

     

    The focus still seems to pretty heavy on education however given the new opportunities that opened up, things changed. I still see a heavy interest

    from the RPF in education though. They just seem to be relying more on outside help and they always said that they wanted that too.

     

    I do consider caches and data paths but I assume they both have video and CPU caches so I see no advantage either way there. Displaying video

    must have top priority otherwise the display will have artifacts and that would not do at all. For this reason it makes sense that the memory path to

    the CPU in the Pi runs through the video section first. Sooner or later (and probably fairly often) there is going to a miss in all caches and filling sets

    of tag lines (video first, always) through a 16 bit data path is a major bottleneck. Even with the 32 bit data path I'm fairly confident that this is a major

    reason as to why the Pi seems sluggish most of the time even when it is overclocked to 1 GHz. I don't see how a 16 bit data path can be made to

    improve that.

     

    I will never been a big fan of the CPU and video sharing memory on motherboards. For low cost solutions using SOC's it makes more sense but at

    a (literally) noticeable cost.

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  • gdstew
    gdstew over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    Morgaine wrote:

     

    and the gratification is not instant because the newbie "hurdle" of writing the SD card still has to be overcome.

     

    Every company that I know of that sells the Pi offers pre-programed SD cards too.

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 12 years ago in reply to gdstew

    Guys/gals

     

    This is a much better debate ...well done.

    Thanks for the responses re the comparisons/features.

     

    A new user looking to compare them still has to read through lots of discussions in order to draw a list.

     

    Do we have a means of producing a table with perhaps 4 columns

    Pi A, Pi B, BB, BBB

     

    something similar to the table of Page 10 of the datasheet found here.

    (interesting it says not for dissemination)

    http://nz.element14.com/circuitco/bb-bblk-000/beaglebone-black-cortex-a8-dev/dp/2291620

     

     

    since E14 are selling both/all it shouldn't be hard to have a page that can be edited, or should we tackle a WIKI page that is maybe moderated.?

     

     

    The points made about extras are also worthy of note, and while obtaining a preprogrammed card v downloading and programming are noted, it shouldn't be beyond the realms of nearly anyone, as long as the instructions are clear (last time I looked they were).

     

    For the video discussion, that information can be included with a 'plain english' note suggesting more/less suitable as a media centre, or something that gives information to someone whom frame count and bit numbers mean nothing to.

     

     

    One thing is clear from the Pi entry into the market, it has brought change, and more affordable hardware to the reaches of more people.

    Be that technogeeks (no offense) or ordinary interested people.

     

     

    Also can someone please explain the fascination with Antoids tins.

    The KL25z apears to also fit, although I'm not sure why you'd use a metal tin to house a bare pcb that needs external connections in order to function, and generally will have a display or leds that somehow need to get through to the outside world.

     

     

    cheers

    Mark

     

    PS I will probably add a BBB to my other controllers, but in the meantime I have too many other things on to use in in anger.

    This doesn't mean that new users have the luxury and may need good information as their purchasing ability is lacking.

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  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to mcb1

    Mark Beckett wrote:

     

    The KL25z apears to also fit

     

    While it fits in the tin, it doesn't fit in the group. image

     

    Just to clarify that the mention of KL25Z wasn't to rank the Freedom board alongside BB and Pi.  For the benefit of new readers ...

     

    Microcontrollers like the KL25Z/Cortex-M0+ are in a different category to application processors like the BCM2835/ARM11 or AM3359/Cortex-A8, which is why manufacturers use those two different terms as marketing slots.  ARM even formalizes the distinction in their naming now, Cortex-M (or R) series versus Cortex-A, which is much clearer than the terminology they used back in the days of ARM9 and ARM11.

     

    Boards like the Freescale Freedom KL25Z belong in the microcontroller group alongside ST's STM32F4-Discovery and the zillion forms of Arduino.  The SoCs in this group typically do not provide an MMU (at best they may provide an MPU with a small number of segments like 8), and so they cannot properly support full operating systems with strong process separation.  That's why they're nearly always programmed either as bare metal or running an RTOS designed for microcontrollers.  (The special uClinux variant can run on them, but its use has decreased markedly now that application processors are common.)

     

    Application processors have proper MMUs and so can run full Linux or other process-protected operating systems.  They're best considered separately, so your suggestion of "Pi A, Pi B, BB, BBB" is a cohesive set since they all employ application processors.

     

    Morgaine.

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