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The '''Banana M1''' is a credit card-sized and low-power [[single-board computer]] developed in China by the Banana Pi Team, with the intention of promoting STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools..
The '''Banana M1''' is a credit card-sized and low-power [[single-board computer]] developed in China by the Banana Pi Team, with the intention of promoting STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools.


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GPIO specification '''Banana Pi''' 26-pin GPIO Banana Pi has a 26-pin GPIO header that matches that of the Model A & B Raspberry Pi. [[File:BPI-M1 GPIO.jpg|BPI-M1 GPIO]]
GPIO specification '''Banana Pi''' 26-pin GPIO Banana Pi has a 26-pin GPIO header that matches that of the Model A & B Raspberry Pi.<br> [[File:BPI-M1 GPIO.jpg|BPI-M1 GPIO]]


<br>
<br>
Banana Pi has no direct relationship to the [[Raspberry Pi Foundation]], though its similarities are clear.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.techrepublic.com/pictures/raspberry-pi-five-alternative-boards-for-hackers-and-modders/5/ |title=Raspberry Pi: Five alternatives for hackers and modders |newspaper=TechRepublic |last=Heath |first=Nick |date=21 May 2014}}</ref> "Linux user & Developer" does not consider it a "direct clone, but a considerable evolution," whilst linux.com similarly sees it as a clone with improved performance.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/reviews/banana-pi-review-tastier-than-raspberry |title=Banana Pi review – tastier than Raspberry? |website=Linux User & Developer |first=Gareth |last=Halfacree}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.linux.com/news/embedded-mobile/mobile-linux/771048-raspberry-pi-clones-match-the-connectors-but-boost-the-firepower |title=Raspberry Pi Clones Match the Connectors, But Boost the Firepower |first=Eric |last=Brown |newspaper=Linux News |date=24 April 2014 }}</ref> The board layout is very similar to the Raspberry Pi board, though it's about 10% larger and the relative spacing of some connectors varies. Not all Raspberry Pi accessories will fit as a result.
Banana Pi has no direct relationship to the [[Raspberry Pi Foundation]], though its similarities are clear.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.techrepublic.com/pictures/raspberry-pi-five-alternative-boards-for-hackers-and-modders/5/ |title=Raspberry Pi: Five alternatives for hackers and modders |newspaper=TechRepublic |last=Heath |first=Nick |date=21 May 2014}}</ref> "Linux User & Developer" does not consider it a "direct clone, but a considerable evolution," whilst linux.com similarly sees it as a clone with improved performance.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.linuxuser.co.uk/reviews/banana-pi-review-tastier-than-raspberry |title=Banana Pi review – tastier than Raspberry? |website=Linux User & Developer |first=Gareth |last=Halfacree}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.linux.com/news/embedded-mobile/mobile-linux/771048-raspberry-pi-clones-match-the-connectors-but-boost-the-firepower |title=Raspberry Pi Clones Match the Connectors, But Boost the Firepower |first=Eric |last=Brown |newspaper=Linux News |date=24 April 2014 }}</ref> The board layout is very similar to the Raspberry Pi board, though it's about 10% larger and the relative spacing of some connectors varies. Not all Raspberry Pi accessories will fit as a result.


==Banana Pi M1+==
==Banana Pi M1+==

Revision as of 07:39, 13 January 2016

Banana Pi is a single-board computer produced by Shenzhen LeMaker Technology Co.,Ltd, with a design that is heavily influenced by the Raspberry Pi.

The design is similar enough that most software created for the Raspberry Pi can run on the Banana Pi with little or no modification. The Banana Pi can run NetBSD, Android, Ubuntu, Debian, Archlinux and cubieboard. Raspbian can be run, though the CPU complies with the requirements of the Debian armhf port.[1] It uses the Allwinner A20 SoC (system on a chip) and as such is mostly covered by the linux-sunxi port. The boards are made in China.

Banana PI is the open source hardware platform designed to assist the Elastos.org open source OS.

Features

Banana PI hardware: 1Ghz ARMv7 dual-core processor, 1GB DDR3 SDRAM, Banana PI with Gigabit ethernet port, SATA Socket. It can run with Android 4.2.2 smoothly. The Banana PI M1 is credit card sized, can run games, supports 1080P high definition video output, the GPIO is compatible with Raspberry Pi, and it can run the ROM Image directly.

The CSI Camera Connector is a 40-pin FPC connector which can connect external camera module with proper signal pin mappings. The pin definitions of the CSI interface are shown as below. This is marked on the Banana Pi.

Banana Pi M1

Banana Pi M1
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateOctober 2014
Operating systemAndroid (Android 4.2, Android 4.4),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A20[2]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageSD card & SATA 2.0
GraphicsMali-400 MP2[3]
Dimensions92 mm × 60 mm
Mass48 g
WebsiteBanana M1

The Banana M1 is a credit card-sized and low-power single-board computer developed in China by the Banana Pi Team, with the intention of promoting STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools.

Banana Pi M1
CPU A20 ARM Cortex -A7 Dual-Core
GPU ARM Mali400MP2Complies with OpenGL ES 2.0/1.1
Memory 1GB DDR3
Network 10/100/1000 Ethernet RJ45
Video Input A CSI input connector allows for the connection of a designed camera module
Video Outputs HDMI, CVBS, LVDS/RGB
Audio Outputs 3.5mm jack and HDMI
Power Source 5 volt via Micro USB (DC in only) and / or Micro USB OTG
USB 2.0 ports 2 (direct from Allwinner A20 chip)
GPIO GPIO, UART, I2C BUS, SPI BUS, WITH TWO CHIP SELECTS, CAN bus, ADC, PWM, +3.3V, +5V, GND
LED Power Key & RJ45

GPIO specification Banana Pi 26-pin GPIO Banana Pi has a 26-pin GPIO header that matches that of the Model A & B Raspberry Pi.
BPI-M1 GPIO


Banana Pi has no direct relationship to the Raspberry Pi Foundation, though its similarities are clear.[4] "Linux User & Developer" does not consider it a "direct clone, but a considerable evolution," whilst linux.com similarly sees it as a clone with improved performance.[5][6] The board layout is very similar to the Raspberry Pi board, though it's about 10% larger and the relative spacing of some connectors varies. Not all Raspberry Pi accessories will fit as a result.

Banana Pi M1+

Banana Pi M1+
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateApril 2015
Operating systemAndroid (Android 4.2, Android 4.4),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A20[2]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageMicroSD card & SATA 2.0
GraphicsMali-400 MP2[3]
Dimensions92 mm × 60 mm
Mass48 g
WebsiteBanana M1+

The Banana M1+ is a credit card-sized and low-power single-board computer developed in China by the Banana Pi Team, with the intention of promoting the STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools.

Banana Pi M1+
CPU A20 ARM Coretx -A7 Dual-Core
GPU ARM Mali400MP2Complies with OpenGL ES 2.0/1.1
Memory 1GB DDR3
Network 10/100/1000 Ethernet RJ45 WIFI
Video Input A CSI input connector allows for the connection of a designed camera module
Video Outputs HDMI, CVBS, LVDS/RGB
Audio Outputs 3.5mm jack and HDMI
Power Source 5 volt via Micro USB (DC in only) and / or Micro USB OTG
USB 2.0 ports 2(direct from Allwinner A20 chip)
GPIO GPIO, UART, I2C BUS, SPI BUS, WITH TWO CHIP SELECTS, CAN bus, ADC, PWM, +3.3V, +5V, GND
LED Power Key & RJ45
OS Android 4.4, Android 4.2, RAspbian, Lubuntu, Open Suse, Debian

Banana Pi M2

Banana Pi M2
Banana Pi-M2 single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateApril 2015
Operating systemAndroid (Android 4.2, Android 4.4),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A31[7]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Quad-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageMicroSD
Dimensions92 mm × 60 mm
Mass52 g
WebsiteBanana M2

The Banana M2 is a credit card-sized and low-power single-board computer developed in China by the Banana Pi Team, with the intention of promoting the STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools.

Banana PI M2 is the open source hardware platform, Banana PI M2 is an quad core version of Banana Pi, Banana PI M2 is the quad core more better than the Banana Pi M1, it supports on board Wi-Fi. Banana Pi M2 series runs Android, Debian linux, Ubuntu linux, Raspberry Pi images and other images. Banana PI M2 hardware: 1Ghz ARM7 quad-core processor, 1GB DDR3 SDRAM, Banana PI with Gigabit ethernet port, It can run with Android 4.4 smoothly. The size of Banana PI M2 same as banana pi M1, it can easily run with the game it support 1080P high definition video output, the GPIO compatible with Raspberry Pi B+ and can run the ROM Image. Note: Banana Pi M2 does not support sata port, so you need use USB for hardisk

Banana Pi M2
CPU A31S ARM Cortex-A7 Quad-Core ,256K[2] B L1 cache 1MB L2 cache
GPU PowerVR SGX544MP2 Comply with OpenGL ES 2.0 OpenCL 1x,DX9_3
Memory 1GB DDR3 (shared with GPU)
Network 10/100/1000 Ethernet RJ45
Video Input A CSI input connector allows for the connection of a designed camera module
Video Outputs HDMI,CVBS,LVDS/RGB
Audio Outputs 3.5mm jack and HDMI
Power Source 5 volt via Micro USB(DC in Only)and /or Micro USB OTG
USB 2.0 ports 4 USB PORT
GPIO GPIO, UART, I2C BUS, SPI BUS, WITH TWO CHIP SELECTS, ADC, PWM, +3.3V, +5V, GND
LED Power Key & RJ45
OS Android and Linux etc.OS

Banana Pi M3

Banana Pi M3
BPI-M3
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateApril 2015
Operating systemAndroid (Android 5.1.1),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A83t[8]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Octa-core (ARMv7-A) 2 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageMicroSD card & SATA 2.0
GraphicsPower VR SGX544MP1
Dimensions92 mm × 60 mm
Mass48 g
WebsiteM3

Banana PI M3 is an open source hardware platform, Banana PI M3 is an octa core version of Banana Pi, it supports on board Wi-Fi and SATA Port. Banana Pi M3 series runs Android, Debian linux, Ubuntu linux, Raspberry Pi images and other images. Banana PI M3 hardware: 2Ghz ARM7 octa-core processor, 2GB LPDDR3 SDRAM, Banana PI with Gigabit ethernet port, It can run with Android 5.1.1 smoothly. The size of Banana PI M3 same as banana pi M1, it can easily run with the game it support 1080P high definition video output, the GPIO compatible with Raspberry Pi B+ and can run the ROM Image.

Banana Pi M3
CPU Allwinner A83T ARM Cortex-A7 Octa-Core 1,8 GHz, 512KB L1 cache and 1MB L2 cache
GPU PowerVR SGX544MP1 Comply with OpenGL ES 2.0 OpenCL 1x, DX9_3
Memory 2GB LPDDR3 (shared with GPU)
Storage On Board 8Go eMMC Flash, Micro SD-Card slot, SATA 2.0 Port
Network 10/100/1000 Mb/s Ethernet (Realtek RTL8211E/D) + WiFi 802.11 b/g/n (AP6212) + Bluetooth BT4.0
Video Input(s) A CSI input connector allows for the connection of a designed camera module
Video Output(s) HDMI 1.4 (Type A Full), MIPI Display Serial Interface (DSI) for raw LCD Panel
Audio Input(s) On board microphone
Audio Output(s) 3.5mm jack and HDMI
USB ports USB 2.0 PORT (x2), USB OTG (x1)
Remote IR Receiver (x1)
GPIO 40 Pin Header : GPIO (x28) and Power (+5V, +3.3V and GND). Some of I/O Pin can be used for specifc functions as UART, I2C, SPI or PWM
Switches Reset, Power and U-boot
LED Power Status and RJ45
Power Source 5 volt @2A via DC Power and/or Micro USB (OTG)
Size & Weight 92x60mm, 48g
OS Android and Linux

Banana Pi G1

BPI-G1 is an integrated IEEE802.11 b / g / n (WIFI wireless network), IEEE802.15.4 (Zigbee), IEEE 802.11-2007 Standard (Bluetooth Low Energy4.0) development board. It is very easy to put these wireless protocol seamlessly together, you can exchange any different transport protocols, and three kinds of wireless protocols are integrated by three single-chip SOC, you can easily create your own Internet of things (IoT).

WIFI part of which is the use of TI's CC3200, which is a high-performance ARM? Cortex?-M4 wireless SOC, internally integrated TCP / IP protocol stack, simply use the BSD Socket can connect to the Internet.

The Zigbee is used TI CC2530, which integrates wireless capabilities and enhanced 8051 core SOC, TI after years of improvement, it is already quite mature and stable, TI's Z-stack has achieved Zigbee 2007 / Pro, you can use the 16's short address, you can use the 64-bit long address communication, face large local interconnect systems, advanced security encryption and mesh network structure can easily cope.

Bluetooth 4.0 (BLE) using TI CC2540 / 1, an integrated BLE stack and enhanced 8051 core, low-power wireless SOC, at present, most mobile phones have support for Bluetooth 4.0, both as a wearable device, or mobile interactive Accessories, CC2540 can be easily completed. Meanwhile, BPI G1 also incorporates a high-performance STM32 ARM? Cortex?-M3 microcontroller, which will help you deal with time-consuming data or transit, the three wireless SOC coordinated. Therefore, the use of BPI G1 can help you quickly achieve a variety of things DIY design.

Banana Pi G1
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateApril 2015
Operating systemFree-RTOS,TI-OS、Coutom-OS
System on a chipSTM32F103
Dimensions95 mm × 56 mm
Mass19 g
WebsiteBanana G1
Banana Pi G1
MCU STM32F103CB ARM Cortex™ -M3 32-bit RISC core
WIFI TI CC3200 一integrated ARM Cortex -M4 MCU with一WiFi network cc 3200 device is an integrated high-performance ARM Cortex™-M4 MCU and with a Wi-Fi network processor sbsystem (This subsystem includes 802.11 b/g/n radio,baseband,network protocol stack and a powerful encryption engine MAC,supports 256 bit encryption in order to achieve a fast,secure Internet connection). This device contains a variety of peripherals, including a fast parallel camera interface, I2S,SD/MMC,UART,SPI,I2C and four-channel analog to digital converter(ADC).
Bluetooth TI CC2540 device is a low cost,low power, true system-on-chip(SoC) for Bluetooth low energy applications. It enables to build a strong BLE master or slave node with very low total cost BOM.
ZigBee IEEE802.15.4 via TI CC2530 (SoC)for IEEE 802.15.4, Zigbee RF4CE applications and solutions. CC2530 combines the excellent RF transceiver, the industry-standard enhanced 8051 MCU, in-system programmable flash memory,8 KB RAM outstanding performance and many other powerful features.
Power Source 5V DC
Buttons reset
LED WiFi Bluetooth ZigBee
Display OLED(128*64)
OS Free-RTOS Ti-OS Custom-OS

Powered by AXP209 power management unit, Banana Pi is able to output up to 1.6 A, which means users can drive an external HDD without an extra power supply.

The Banana Pi board is similar to Cubieboard2.[9]

Banana Pi D1
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateOctober 2014
Operating systemrunning on llinux 3.4.35
CPUARM986EJ 32Bits RISC Core 400 MHz
Memory64MB DDR2
StorageMicroSD card
Dimensions38 mm × 38 mm
Mass10 g
WebsiteBanana D1
Banana Pi R1
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateOctober 2014
Operating systemAndroid (Android 4.2, Android 4.4),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A20[2]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageMicroSD card & SATA 2.0
GraphicsMali-400 MP2[3]
WebsiteBanana R1

BPI-D1

The BPI-D1 is one of the smallest open-source development board currently on the market, with a built-in HD mini camera. At 36mm (w) x36mm (l) and weighing in at 10g, it is claimed to be much smaller than other boards comparable features. The board is ideally suited to mini-cam applications, providing high-resolution image quality: both video and still capture at 1280x720p with a video capture rate of 30 fps.

The BPI-D1 is designed to provide a set of multimedia tools in one small package, that can be run from an external battery source.

The major features of the D1 include: HD mini-cam, audio sensor, microphone, CPU, GPIO, and WiFi,

Banana Pi R1

Banana Pi
Banana Pi single board computer
DeveloperBanana Pi
TypeSingle-board computer
Release dateOctober 2014
Operating systemAndroid (Android 4.2, Android 4.4),Linux (Bananian, Lubuntu, Raspbian, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora, Arch Linux ARM, Gentoo, openSUSE), Berryboot, FreeBSD, OpenWrt
System on a chipAllwinner A20[2]
CPUARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz
MemoryGB
StorageMicroSD card & SATA 2.0
GraphicsMali-400 MP2[3]
Dimensions92 mm × 60 mm
Mass48 g
Websitewww.lemaker.org

The BPI- R1 is a 300Mbit/s Wireless N Router with both wired and wireless network connections is designed specifically for smart home networking use. With 2T2R MIMO Technology and two detachable antennas, the R1 is the dual core Android 4.2 product which aclaims to be better than other Linux products. It runs with Android4.2.2 smoothly and with a Gigabit ethernet port, SATA Socket, it easily runs with the game and support for 1080P high definition video output.

Banana Pi PRO

The Banana Pro is a credit card-sized and low-power single-board computer developed in China by the LeMaker Team, with the intention of promoting STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) education in schools.

Like is smaller brother the Banana Pi, the Pro concept is heavily influenced by the Raspberry Pi, however the Banana pro represents a significant enhancement over these earlier designs.

The Banana Pro has an Allwinner A20 system on a chip (SoC), which includes an ARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7-A) 1 GHz, Mali-400 MP2 GPU and 1GB DDR3 SDRAM.

The Pro uses a microSD card for booting an OS, but also includes a SATA 2.0 interface to allow connection of a hard disk for additional storage, however you cannot boot from the hard disk.

Other differences to the Banana Pi include on-board WiFi 802.11 b/g/n AP6181, integrated composite video and audio output into a 3.5 mm TRRS jack, this makes space for a 40 pin extension header.

Specifications

Hardware Specification Sheet
Banana Pi[10] Banana Pro[11]
SoC Allwinner A20 Allwinner A20 (CPU, GPU, SATA 2.0, 3 USB ports)
CPU 1 GHz ARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core 1 GHz ARM Cortex-A7 Dual-core (ARMv7 instruction set)
GPU ARM Mali-400 MP2 dual GPU core Mali-400 MP2 - complies with OpenGL ES 2.0/1.1 (hardware acceleration support)
Memory (SDRAM) 1 GB DDR3 DRAM (shared with GPU) 1 GB DDR3 DRAM (shared with GPU)
Power Expects 5 V source connected to the micro-USB connector, recommended 2 A if connecting a SATA hard disk using the onboard power connector 5 V @ 2 A via micro-USB (DC in only) and/or micro-USB (OTG)
PMU AXP209
USB 2 USB 2.0 host, 1 USB OTG 2 USB 2.0 host, 1 USB 2.0 OTG (all direct from A20 chip)
Low-level peripherals 26 extended pins including I²C, SPI, UART, CAN bus 40 pins GPIO headers

28 GPIO, some of which can be used for specific functions including UART, I2C, SPI, PWM, CAN, I2S, SPDIF

Onboard Storage SD slot (maximum 64 GB), 7-pin SATA 2.0 data port (with a separate power connector), supporting maximum 4 TB hard drive MicroSD card

SATA 2.0 (with a separate power connector)

Onboard Network 10/100/1000 Ethernet connector, with LEDs 10/100/1000 Ethernet RJ45

150 Mbit/s WiFi 802.11 b/g/n AP6181

Bluetooth Optional
Display Allwinner A20 built-in, supports HDMI 1080p and CVBS Supports multi-channel HD display:

HDMI 1.4 (Type A - full), composite video (PAL and NTSC) (via 3.5 mm TRRS jack shared with audio out), LVDS/RGB/CPU display interface (DSI) for raw LCD panels. 11 HDMI resolutions from 640×480 to 1920×1080 plus various PAL and NTSC standards

Video CedarX HD H.264 2160p video decoding. Multi-format FHD video decoding, including MPEG1/2, MPEG4, H.263, H.264, etc. H.264 high profile 1080p@30fps or 720p@60fps encoding
Camera 1 CSI camera connector Parallel 8-bit camera interface
Audio Outputs ⌀3.5 mm audio output jack HDMI, analog audio (via 3.5 mm TRRS jack shared with composite video out), I2S audio (also potentially for audio input)
Audio input Onboard microphone Onboard microphone
Buttons Power, reset and u-boot switches mounted on board Power, reset and u-boot switches mounted on board
LEDs One user-defined LED on board Power status LED (red), Ethernet status LED (blue), user defined LED (green)
Other Onboard IR receiver Onboard IR receiver
Dimensions 92 mm × 60 mm 92 mm × 60 mm
Weight 48 g 48 g

Available operating systems

Banana Pi[11]

  • Android 4.2.2 & 4.4 for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.39+, 4.4 doesn't support Wifi and has many bugs, 4.2.2 doesn't support all apps in Korea)
  • Archlinux for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103; 2014-12-26)
  • Bananian Linux (Debian based; Linux kernel 3.4.104+; 2015-01-11)
  • CentOS 7 (1511)
  • Debian for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.107 & mainline; 2015-01-16)
  • Fedora for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103; 2014-12-26)
  • Kali Linux for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103)
  • Kano for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103)
  • Lubuntu for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103; 2014-12-26)
  • NetBSD 7.0
  • nOS for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103)
  • openSUSE for Banana Pi (openSUSE v1412; Linux kernel 3.4.103; 2014-12-26)
  • Raspbian for Banana Pi (Linux kernel 3.4.103; 2014-12-26)
  • Scratch for Banana Pi (Boot to Scratch directly) (Linux kernel 3.4.103)

Source code

Performance Benchmarks

See also

References

  1. ^ "Debian Wiki: armhf – Arm Hard Float Port". Debian Wiki.
  2. ^ a b c d http://www.allwinnertech.com/en/clq/processora/A20.html
  3. ^ a b c d http://www.arm.com/products/multimedia/mali-graphics-hardware/mali-400-mp.php?tab=Specifications
  4. ^ Heath, Nick (21 May 2014). "Raspberry Pi: Five alternatives for hackers and modders". TechRepublic.
  5. ^ Halfacree, Gareth. "Banana Pi review – tastier than Raspberry?". Linux User & Developer.
  6. ^ Brown, Eric (24 April 2014). "Raspberry Pi Clones Match the Connectors, But Boost the Firepower". Linux News.
  7. ^ http://www.allwinnertech.com/en/clq/processora/A31.html
  8. ^ http://www.allwinnertech.com/en/clq/processora/AllwinnerA80.html
  9. ^ "Test: Einplatinen-Computer Banana Pi als Raspberry-Pi-Ersatz". CT Magazine (in German).
  10. ^ "Banana Pi Specifications". Lemaker Wiki.
  11. ^ a b "Specifications from board manufacturer". Banana Pro.