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Monday, December 8th, 2014

    Time Event
    9:00a
    Imagination Launches Creator CI20 Development Board

    Last week Imagination launched the Creator C10 development board. This device is quite interesting because of the combination of architecture, features, developer support, form factor, and pricing. It also has some historical significance as it houses the first SoC to combine a MIPS CPU with PowerVR graphics. Imagination (the company behind PowerVR) purchased MIPS Technologies in February of 2013, and now the fruit of that investment can be found in silicon. That SoC is the Ingenic JZ4780. Ingenic is also known for the development of the Newton platform and XBurst CPUs.

    At a high level, the easiest way to describe the CI20 is Raspberry Pi on steroids. Or perhaps this is what the Raspberry Pi could have been if redesigned two years later with about 60% more cost and a larger PCB size budget. This was clearly a target of Imagination as the CI20 contains the exact same expansion connector as the Raspberry Pi.

      Imagination Creator CI20 Raspberry Pi Model B+
    SoC Ingenic JZ4780 Broadcom BCM2835
    CPU Dual 1.2GHz XBurst
    (MIPS32 instruction set)
    700 MHz ARM1176JZF-S
    (ARM11 family, ARMv6 instruction set)
    GPU PowerVR SGX 540 @ Unknown MHz Broadcom VideoCore IV @ 250 MHz
    Memory 1GB DDR3 512MB DDR2
    USB 1x USB OTG (A and Mini connectors)
    1x USB Host
    4 USB 2.0 Host
    Camera Interface 24-pin connector (ITU-R BT.645) 15-pin MIPI (CSI) connector
    Video Output HDMI 1.4a HDMI 1.3a
    Composite video 3.5mm jack
    Audio In 3.5mm jack shared with output via I²S interface
    Audio Output HDMI
    3.5mm jack shared with input
    HDMI
    3.5mm jack
    I²S interface
    Storage 4GB NAND
    1x full SD slot
    1x SD slot via expansion header
    via MicroSD
    Network 10/100 Ethernet
    2.4GHz WiFi b/g/n + BT 4.0 (BCM4330)
    10/100 Ethernet
    IR Input (IRM-2638A) -
    Max Power Consumption 4 Watts 3 Watts
    Power Connector 5V barrel connector MicroUSB
    Size Approx. 90mm x 95mm (3.54 in x 3.74 in) 85.60 mm × 56.5 mm (3.37 in × 2.22 in)
    Price $65 or £50 $35 without MPEG2 and VC1 codecs
    $40.60 with MEPG2 and VC1 codecs

    As you can see from the above table, the CI20 is in a completely different league when it comes to technical specifications. A much more powerful SoC, featuring MIPS and PowerVR, headlines the CI20, but the wealth of interfaces combined with improved storage/memory completes an impressive package for the price. Both the Raspberry Pi and the CI20 feature similar encode and decode support, except the pricing for the CI20 includes licenses to do so. Also, the CI20 supports 1080p60 decode, an upgrade over the 1080p30 of the Raspberry Pi.

    For the software side of things, Imagination provides images for the CI20 of both Android Kitkat 4.4.4, Debian 7, Gentoo Linux, Yacto Sato, and Angstrom. Arch and OpenWRT are works in progress. For home media center users, there has also been some investigation running XBMC with Debian on the CI20.

    I personally use XBMC on a Raspberry Pi at home. I requested a CI20 review unit from Imagination and received it this past Friday. I plan on doing some performance and power measurements on the device for a future article. Those interested in acquiring a CI20 can preorder (shipping at end of January) at the Imagination Store and enter a giveaway from Imagination.

    10:00a
    Samsung SSD 850 EVO (120GB, 250GB, 500GB & 1TB) Review

    Samsung hasn't stopped impressing me in the SSD space. The early Samsung SSDs weren't very good, but ever since the introduction of the SSD 830 Samsung has been doing a brilliant job and has been setting the bar for performance, cost and reliability. The SSD 840 specifically showed what properly executed vertical integration can really do as Samsung was the first manufacturer to utilize TLC NAND in a client SSD. Two years later Samsung wowed us by introducing world's first SSD with 3D NAND, the SSD 850 Pro, and today Samsung is presenting the TLC flavored V-NAND SSD, more commonly known as the SSD 850 EVO. Read on to find out whether the 850 EVO is as much of a beast as its big brother is!

    4:00p
    Logitech 2014 Switzerland Tech Day: The Hills Are Alive With The Sound Of Romer G

    Now armed with their Logitech G brand for gaming for a number of quarters, Logitech invited influential media to their Daniel Borel Innovation Center in Lausanne, Switzerland, to get a taste of the company and their efforts moving forward.

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