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Pico-ITX board features Pineview Atoms

Jun 4, 2010 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

Commell announced a pico-ITX SBC (single board computer) featuring Intel's “Pineview” Atom processors. The LP-170 offers N450, D410, or D510 CPUs clocked at 1.66GHz, a SATA port and CompactFlash slot, gigabit Ethernet, two serial ports, and a PCI Express Mini Card slot, the company says.

The LP-170 uses Via Technologies' tiny 3.9 x 2.8 inch (10 x 7.2cm) pico-ITX format, which first broke cover at the beginning of January 2007. The form factor has approximately half the surface area of Via's already small 4.7 x 4.7-inch (12 x 12cm) Nano-ITX standard, and is considerably smaller than the original 6.7-inch square (17 x 17cm) mini-ITX standard.


Via's shrinking motherboard designs
(Click for details)

Pico-ITX boards seen to date have, not surprisingly, mostly sported Via processors (such as the Nano U2500-equipped Epia-P820 introduced in January). In 2008, however, Via transferred ownership of the spec to the Small Form Factor SIG (special interest group), which now maintains it as an open, vendor-neutral standard supporting the SUMIT stackable board interface. Later the same year, Axiomtek's PICO820 appeared, claimed to be the first Atom-powered pico-ITX device (it used Z5xx CPUs).

Now, Commell is offering a pico-ITX board with any of the three "Pineview" Atom processors introduced by Intel in December. Listed in the table below, these CPUs include on-chip graphics and are designed to be accompanied by the NM10 or ICH8M I/O chips (the latter is employed by Commell).

Clock speed Cores Second-level cache Memory (DDR2) TDP
N450 1.66GHz 1 512KB 667MHz 5.5 Watts
D410 1.66GHz 1 512KB 667/800MHz


10 Watts
D510 1.66GHz 2 1MB 667/800MHz 13 Watts

The Pineview CPUs offered with Commell's LP-170

According to Commell, N450 and D410 versions of the LP-170 can accept up to 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 memory via a single SODIMM slot. The D510 version accepts up to 4GB of 667/800MHz memory, the company adds.

Commell says the LP-170, pictured below, has a SATA II port plus a Type II CompactFlash socket. The board is also said to have a PCI Express Mini Card slot, which would no doubt be one way to add wireless networking capabilities if desired.


Commell's LP-170

Real-word ports on the edge of the board include a RJ45 connector for gigabit Ethernet, a PS/2 port, and a VGA output, according to Commell. Other interfaces are supplied via pin headers, and include audio, LVDS, four USB 2.0 ports, two RS232 ports, and LPC, the company adds.

Features and specifications listed for the LP-170 by Commell include:

  • Processor — Intel Atom N450, D410, or D510 (all clocked at 1.66Ghz)
  • Memory — Single SODIMM slot supports 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 RAM on N450 and D410 models, 4GB of 667/800MHz DDR2 RAM on D510 model
  • Storage — SATA port, plus CompactFlash slot
  • Display — CRT displays via VGA port, and LCD displays via LVDS pin header
  • Networking — 1 x gigabit Ethernet
  • Other I/O:
    • 1 x VGA port
    • 1 x PS/2
    • 1 x LVDS (pin header)
    • 4 x USB 2.0 (pin headers)
    • 2 x RS232 (pin headers)
    • 12VDC power input connector
    • 1 x LPC (pin header)
    • audio — line out/line in/mic in (pin header)
  • Operating temperature — 32 to 140 deg. F (0 to 60 deg. C)
  • Dimensions — 3.9 x 2.8 inches (100mm x 72mm)

Availability

Commell did not detail pricing, availability, or operating system support, but the LP-170 appears to be available now. More information may be found on the company's website, here.


 
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This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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