--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Sat, Jul 9, 2016 at 10:35 AM, GaCuest gacuest@gmail.com wrote:
El 9 de julio de 2016 a las 3:02:16, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton (lkcl@lkcl.net) escribió:
http://www.xataka.com/makers/el-cerebro-de-todos-tus-gadgets-puede-caber-en-...
wow, this article has 45 shares and 300 likes on facebook - completely missed it because i'd never heard of xataka before.
Xataka is an important website in Spanish about technology.
From the comments, I see that people think that Allwinner A20 is less powerful and more expensive than Raspberry 3.
and the rbpi3 is from an unethical company.... i'm not going to start an ethical business by working with unethical companies, am i? that never tends to work out well, does it? :)
There is another who says to launch an EOMA-68 with an Atom (or CoreM). I suppose CoreM is not possible by high consumption.
that and the sheer cost of boards using intel processors is way outside of the current realm of practicality at the moment. it would cost something like $USD 50,000 and we would need to do a minimum production run of 30,000 to justify the cost.
also intel do not provide Reference Designs so the time taken would be 4-6 months, and they do not provide PMIC (Power Management Integrated Circuit) information nor guarantee access to the specialist PMICs. unlike the low-power SoC companies, intel have never really succeeded in this market and one of the things that they do not understand is that you must provide a companion PMIC and guarantee access to it *and* the processor. if a third party refuses to give you PMIC samples, what's the point of having the processor *at all*???
but, intel has now completely given up on the smartphone and tablet market.
later however we will do an EOMA200 small desktop / industrial PC but that is a radically different proposition.
I think that people are not very concerned that Intel, or Windows, or NSA spy on them. They prefer a very powerful processor, although it is not free and spy on them. Usually people think they do nothing illegal with their computers, so people do not care that others spy on them.
... until their bank account information is held to ransom by mafia groups. it's not just the NSA: it's powerful groups with ties to governments whose capability to break RSA 2048 bit private keys is unknown. remember: the "security nightmare" for intelligence communities is not what's *known* to be insecure (because you can plan for that), it's what's *NOT* known to be insecure that keeps them awake at night.
remember *also* that i have word from a friend who is studying mathematics, he hasn't been able to release the paper because he is concerned for his life, but he has discovered a way to test for prime numbers based around the riemann-zeta function, using a recursive algorithm that uses arithmetic shift, multiplication and addition/subtract - NO DIVISION. it can test for primality in something like O(N log N) where current tests are.... O( N ^ 2 ) or something like that. so if he knows how to do it, you can *guarantee* that it's a technique that's *already* been discovered a hell of a long time ago.
If you want, I can answer for you in Spanish. Or tell me what you want to say in English, I translate in Spanish, and you post it on Xataka.
if you could check and add the above i'd be really grateful