With its first computer based on the extremely low-power Quark
processor, Intel is tapping into the 'maker' community to figure out
ways the new chip could be best used.
The chip maker announced the Galileo computer -- which is a board
without a case -- with the Intel Quark X1000 processor on Thursday. The
board is targeted at the community of do-it-yourself enthusiasts who
make computing devices ranging from robots and health monitors to home
media centers and PCs.
The Galileo board should become widely available for under $60 by the
end of November, said Mike Bell, vice president and general manager of
the New Devices Group at Intel.
Bell hopes the maker community will use the board to build prototypes
and debug devices. The Galileo board will be open-source, and the
schematics will be released over time so it can be replicated by
individuals and companies.
Bell's New Devices Group is investigating business opportunities in
the emerging markets of wearable devices and the "Internet of things."
The chip maker launched the extremely low-power Quark processor for such
devices last month.
Intel's Quark processor.
"People want to be able to use our chips to do creative things," Bell
said. "All of the coolest devices are coming from the maker community."
But at around $60, the Galileo will be more expensive than the
popular Raspberry Pi, which is based on an ARM processor and sells for
$25. The Raspberry Pi can also render 1080p graphics, which Intel's
Galileo can't match.
Making inroads in the enthusiast community
Questions also remain on whether Intel's overtures will be accepted
by the maker community, which embraces the open-source ethos of a
community working together to tweak hardware designs. Intel has made a
lot of contributions to the Linux OS, but has kept its hardware designs
secret. Intel's efforts to reach out to the enthusiast community is
recent; the company's first open-source PC went on sale in July.
Intel is committed long-term to the enthusiast community, Bell said.
Intel also announced a partnership with Arduino, which provides a
software development environment for the Galileo motherboard. The
enthusiast community has largely relied on Arduino microcontrollers and
boards with ARM processors to create interactive computing devices.
The Galileo is equipped with a 32-bit Quark SoC X1000 CPU, which has a
clock speed of 400MHz and is based on the x86 Pentium Instruction Set
Architecture. The Galileo board supports Linux OS and the Arduino
development environment. It also supports standard data transfer and
networking interfaces such as PCI-Express, Ethernet and USB 2.0.
Intel has demonstrated its Quark chip running in eyewear and a
medical patch to check for vitals. The company has also talked about the
possibility of using the chip in personalized medicine, sensor devices
and cars.
Intel hopes creating interactive computing devices with Galileo will
be easy. Writing applications for the board is as simple as writing
programs to standard microcontrollers with support for the Arduino
development environment.
"Essentially it's transparent to the development," Bell said.
Intel is shipping out 50,000 Galileo boards for free to students at over 1,000 universities over the next 18 months.
We're testing four nettops: Arctic Cooling’s MC001-BD,
ASRock’s CoreHT 252B, Giada’s i50, and Zotac’s Zbox AD03BR-PLUS. All of
these tiny, quiet systems take a very different approach to compact
computing, and we fill you in on what makes them unique.
Intel’s Atom CPU might have been the
driving force behind the popularization of the nettop form factor, but
manufacturers are squeezing more powerful hardware into these tiny
machines. Sometimes, more potent graphics performance is added via a
mobile chipset. Sometimes, processing m muscle is emphasized instead
with a CPU designed for powerful notebook.
And now, APUs belonging to AMD's Fusion initiative are an option,
serving up efficient power use and higher-performance graphics on a
single processor die.
Truly, the nettop is no longer a stripped-down machine barely capable
of Web browsing and word processing. These tiny PCs are tailor-made to
excel in specific applications, which often includes use in a home
theater.
You may recall theRaspberry Pi, a barebones PC for emerging markets that they hope to sell for $25. When we wrote it up earlier this year, there wasn’t much in the way of demonstration: a few stills of the PCB and a video with founder David Braben describing his plan for the device. But today we have a demo that both captures the geek imagination and proves the device has legs:they’ve got it running Quake III.
Not that it’s some big accomplishment to run a game released in the last millennium, but it actually does pretty well. The device uses a 700MHz ARM processor and has 128MB of RAM enabled here, and lacking any on-device storage, it’s running the OS (Debian CLI) and the game off an SD card.
They could hit higher framerates, but wanted to show that 1920×1080 with 4xAA was possible. Naturally you could reduce this quite a bit and max out the refresh rate on your monitor; Q3A isn’t exactly the most graphics-intensive game on the market.
The game isn’t being emulated; they actually compiled the open source version for their Debian build. They plan on networking a few together and playing a deathmatch soon.
Now, the point of this isn’t that now, impoverished children in Kazakhstan will be able to hone their all-important FPSing skills. It’s more of a proof of concept showing that a (fairly) modern piece of software can be adapted to the hardware they’ve put together: the Raspberry Pi really is a full-on computer. And while there are Micro ATX boards and systems out there (very useful ones in fact), they don’t come anywhere near the $25 mark. You still need an LCD, keyboard, SD card or USB drive, and so on, but the Raspberry Pi Foundation is all about lowering the entry barrier and providing everything that’s needed in a basic computer for as low a price as possible.
Keep up with the project here. They’ve still got a lot of work to do before they make this a viable product, but things seem to be moving along rapidly.