Linux Gizmos reports samples of the Netboard A10 will be available in Q4 2013, and mass production of the board and rack appliance should start in Q1 2014. The board also powers the company’s 19” Netboard A10 based Network appliance. Netboard A10 boots with SageBIOS Coreboot from a 32Mbit serial SPI flash. non cond.ĭeciso supports both Linux and FreeBSD on the board, with other operating systems available on request. Temperature range – Operating: 0 to +45☌, Storage: -20 to +80☌.ACPI 3.0 (With 5V power rail always active).Ethernet – 4x Gigabit Ethernet (Intel 82574L).6x GPIO on header (2 shared with micro switch and gpio indicator led) Optional.3x Serial (2 on header, 1 with integrated usb serial converter on miniUSB B port).5x USB 2.0 (2 on header, 1 on edge connector, 2 external ports).Option 2: AMD Embedded GX-210HA G-Series SoC (2 x 1.0GHz Jaguar cores, 1MB L2 cache, 9W TDP, Radeon HD 8210E GPU). Option 1: AMD Embedded GX-415GA G-Series SoC (4 x 1.5GHz Jaguar cores, 2MB L2 cache, 15W TDP, Radeon HD 8330E GPU).AMD Embedded GX-416RA G-Series SoC (4x 1.65GHz Jaguar cores, 2MB L2 cache, 15W TDP, no GPU).The company also provides 2 other versions of the board that includes AMD G-Series SoCs with Radeon GPU. Deciso decided to use this processor in the standard version of their Netboard A10, a single board computer that can be used for network based appliances such as IP-PBX, Firewall & UTM or Load Balancer. One of those new SoCs, GX-416RA, is especially designed for headless applications, and does not features GPU. AMD announced the G-Series SoC, AFAIK the first x86 SoC including CPU, GPU and chipset (ala ARM), at the end of April, and a few products are already available such as Win Enterprises MB-60830.
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