Rockchip RK3288-powered Chrome OS devices on the way?
We could see Google’s browser-based Chrome OS operating system running on devices with Rockchip’s RK3288 processor soon. The Chinese chip-maker started showing off a demo of Chromium OS running on a prototype board in April, and now Google’s François Beaufort reports that there’s a new ARM development board in the Chromium OS repository featuring that same chip.
In other words, someone’s at least testing the operating system on Rockchip’s latest processor… and that means we could eventually see a Chrome OS laptop, desktop, or tablet with an RK3288 in the not-too-distant future.
The RK3288 chip is a quad-core ARM Cortex-A17 processor with ARM Mali-T764 graphics.
At this point, most Chrome OS devices feature Intel processors, although Samsung and HP offer a few models with Samsung Exynos 5 dual-core or octa-core chips. If the Rockchip-based system makes it to market, it could be one of the first ARM-based Chrome OS systems with a non-Samsung processor… although the RK3288 chip is new enough that it’s tough to say how it will stack up against Samsung’s chips in terms of performance or power consumption.
Chromium OS is the open source version of Chrome OS, and among other things, it serves as the testing ground for upcoming features, bug fixes, and performance improvements. Not every device that shows up in the Chromium code makes it to market as a real Chrome OS device… but I’m not aware of any Chromebooks or Chromeboxes that didn’t show up somewhere in the Chromium code before they officially launched, although they were usually obscured by code-names.
The code-name for the RK3288 board, by the way, is Veyron.
Here’s an early look at a Rockchip-powered Chromium OS prototype from April:
prima.king Serial Newser
Messages : 2171 Réputation : 100 Inscrit le : 30/06/2013
ARM Cortex A15/A17 SoCs Comparison – Nvidia Tegra K1 vs Samsung Exynos 5422 vs Rockchip RK3288 vs AllWinner A80
We’re now starting to get quite a few players with ARM Cortex A15 cores on the market, as well as some with ARM Cortex A17. So a comparison table of different quad and octa SoCs might be a useful thing to do. I’ve put aside SoCs such as HiSilicon K3V3, and OMAP5, and focused on the four latest processors: Nvidia Tegra K1 (32-bit), Samsung Exynos 5422, Rockchip RK3288 and AllWinner A80. I haven’t included Mediatek MT6595 and Qualcomm SnapDragon 805, because the two companies mainly focus on smartphones and tablets (although it appears to be slowly changing for Qualcomm), documentation is usually difficult or impossible to find, and in the case of Qualcomm they use their own ARMv7 Krait cores. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image]I’ve highlighted some features in green, in case a particular SoC appears to have an edge.
Rockchip RK3288
AllWinner A80
Nvidia Tegra K1
Samsung Exynos 5422
CPU
4x ARM Cortex-A17 @ 1.8 GHZ
4x ARM Cortex-A15 r4 @ 2.0?? GHz + 4x ARM Cortex-A7 @ ?? GHz big.LITTLE Processing
4K2K@30fps: H.264 and VP8 1080p60: MPEG 1/2/4. H.263, H.264, WMV9/VC1, etc… 1080p30: H.265/VP9 3D decoding @ 3840×1080@30fps
1440p – H.264 BP/MP/HP/MVC, VC-1, VP8, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4
1920×1080@120fps – MPEG-4/MPEG-2/H.263/H.264/VP8//VC1 8192×8192 – H.264 and VP8
Video Encoder
1080p30: H.264, MVC, and VP8
4K2K@30fps: H.264 and VP8
H.264 BP/MP/HP/MVC and VP8
1920×1080@120fps – MPEG-4//H.263/H.264/VP8 8192×8192 – H.264 and VP8
Memory (On-chip)
20KB BootRom, 100KB internal SRAM
No data
64KB Boot ROM (IROM)
No data
Memory Interfaces
DDR3-1333/DDR3L-1333, LPDDR2-1066, LPDDR3-1066, up to 4GB Dual channel async NAND flash, 8-bit, 60-bit ECC Single channel async NAND flash, 16-bit, 60-bit ECC eMMC v4.5 SD/MMC Interface (SD 3.0, MMC ver 4.5)
DDR3/DDR3L/LPDDR3/LPDDR2,Up to 8GB Raw NAND with 72-bit ECC eMMC v4.5 4x SD/MMC
DDR3L, and LPDDR3, up to 8GB LPDDR2 might work but not tested by Nvidia eMMC version 4.5 SDIO
LPDDR3/DDR3 – 2-ports 32-bit up to 933 MHz LPDDR2 – 2-ports 32-bit up to 533 MHz 2x eMMC 5.0, 1x eMMC 4.5 8-bit SDIO 3.0, 4-bit SD 3.0
Display Interfaces
Dual channel LVDS 2x Parallel and serial RGB interfaces: Up to 3840×2160 or 2560×1600 MCU LCD interface (optional) 4-lane MIPI up to 1080p60 4-lane eDP up to 4K2K@30fps HDMI 1.4 and 2.0
Dual channel LVDS up to 1920×1080@60fps RGB LCD up to 2048×1536@60fps 4-lane MIPI DSI up to 1920×1200@60fps 4-lane eDP up to 2560×1600@60fps HDMI 1.4
LVDS up to 1920×1200@60fps 2x 4-lane MIPI DSI (Dual link: up to 3840×1920@60fps, single link: 2560×1440@60fps) 4-lane eDP up to 3840×2160@60fps HDMI 1.4b up to 4096×2160@30fps
4-lane MIPI DSI up to WUXGA (1920×1200) @ 60 fps 1-port (4 lanes) eDisplayPort (eDP) up to WQXGA (2560×1600) @ 60 fps HDMI 1.4a interfaces with on-chip PHY
Camera Interfaces
12-bit CCIR/Camera I/F up to 5MP MIPI CSI2 I/F up to 14MP 8/10/12-bit raw data interface
Currently not available, none officially announced.
Announced: OptimusBoard,PcDuino8, Cubieboard A80. No price available.
Nvidia Jetson TK1for $192
None with Exynos 5422, but two with the similar Exynos 5420: Arndale Octa for $179 Announced: ODROID XU-2 (Price not available)
First some general comments:
As details are not always available, and I had to go through thousands of pages of documentation, it’s possible some information is incorrect or missing. So I’d be grateful if anybody points out mistakes in the tablet.
In L2 Cache = xx MB + xx KB refers to the cache for the bit processors (A15) + the cache for the LITTLE processors (A7) or the companion core.
The “Other I/Os” section is mainly for reference, as I’m sure parts are missing here.
I haven’t addressed power consumption of the different SoC, since I don’t believe numbers provided by the SoC vendors are directly comparable.
Antutu scores are interesting to get an idea of the performance, but we should bear in mind AllWinner A80 and Tegra K1 scores appear to have been achieved with development hardware, which may not have the same thermal constraints as the tablet and smartphone used with Rockchip RK3288 and Exynos 5422.
Based on this comparison table, Nvidia Tegra K1 really seems to have the best package in terms of performance, 3D and GPGPU APIs, and peripheral interfaces such as SATA and PCIe which are missing on all other SoCs. The downsides are video encoding is only supported up to 1440p, and there’s no Ethernet MAC. That means no 4K hardware video decoding, although an article from Anandtech mentioned the company demos 4K 30 fps using the Kepler GPU. The way to add Ethernet with Tegra K1 is to use an external Ethernet Control chip and connect it to the PCI Express port, as they did for Jetson TK1 development board. It’s also likely Tegra K1 is more expensive than all other three, but it’s very versatile and could be found in various type of products: tablets, mini PCs, laptops and so on. Linux and Android are supported, and since the company seem inclined to go open source, it’s likely any Linux based OS can be supported by the platform. Rockchip RK3288 should be one of the more cost effective platform in the table, but trade offs includes 1MB L2 cache (vs 2MB for others), an 4GB RAM limitation, the lack of USB 3.0 interfaces, and lower overall performance. However it’s the only SoC that 100% 4K ready here with HDMI 2.0, HEVC decode at up to 4K @ 60fps, as well as Gigabit Ethernet. ARM Cortex A17 should also have lower consumption compared to ARM Cortex A15, but it’s unclear how it will compare against big.LITTLE solution. This will probably remain a gray area because power efficiency will highly depend on the payload. RK3288 has already been demoed on hardware running Android and Chromium OS. AllWinner A80 has performance very close to Tegra K1, apparently supports VP9 (N.B: However, I had been asked to remove VP9 from an AllWinner A80 graphics once), supports 4K30 video decoding, USB 3.0. Apart from the lack of SATA and PCIe interfaces, and OpenGL 4.4 support, AllWinner SoC appears to have few drawbacks compared to Tegra K1, so we’ll have to see how it compares in terms of price versus Rockchip RK3288. The company has also announced support for 5 operating systems for A80: Android, Chrome OS, Ubuntu, Windows 8, and Firefox OS. So they must have worked with Imagination Technology to support the PowerVR GPU on these OS. Samsung Exynos 5422 appears to be just short of AllWinner A80 and Tegra K1 performance, and the company has dropped some interfaces such as SATA, PCIe, LVDS, Ethernet MAC, that makes it a little less versatile than other SoCs, and more targeted at tablets and smartphones. It’s the only SoC that supports both 8K encode and decode (H.264 and VP8 only), but lacks HEVC/H.265 hardware support. It’s also the only SoC to support eMMC 5.0, instead of just eMMC 4.5, which can potentially double the IO performance (400MB/s max instead of 200 MB/s).
Ugoos UT3 and UM3 Android TV Boxes With Rockchip RK3288 Available Soon [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]
We’ve already seen a few RK3288 boards for upcoming Android TV boxes such asZero Devices Z6C,Sunchip TV Box and HDMI Sticks, andUgoos UT3. Most companies did not show off their complete products however, but Ugoos has now unveiled some pictures of their UT3 and UM3 Android TV boxes, and announced availability for next week. This is probably availability to resellers, but it should still mean RK3288 based TV devices should be available within a few weeks, especially since tablets such asPipo P8are already up to sale, and should start shipping within a few days.
Temperature Range – Operating: -10~40℃, Storage: -20~50℃
Humidity – 5%-90%, No condensation
Certification – CCC,CE,EMC,FCC,Wi-Fi
[Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image] Ugoos UT3
[size][color] Both UT3 and UM3 will be sold with a 5V/2A power adapter, an HDMI cable, and an IR remote by default. Compared to their initial specifications release, they’ve made a few changes. Rockchip RK3288 CPU frequency has been increased to 2.0 GHz (instead of 1.8 GHz), they’ve switched to HDMI 2.0 (or simply properly edited the specs), and dropped the option for 4GB RAM. The SATA port that could be seen on the PCBA does not seem to be used. They haven’t provided the dimensions, but it’s quite clear that UM3 will use a smaller form factor, and be a cheaper box without HDMI in, S/PDIF, microphone jack, nor Ethernet port, and 8GB flash instead of 16GB found in Ugoos UT3. Both devices will run Android 4.4.2. Both Android TV boxes should probably become available sometimes in June, at least for pre-order, unless the firmware is found to be too buggy by resellers.[/color][/size]
prima.king Serial Newser
Messages : 2171 Réputation : 100 Inscrit le : 30/06/2013
Teclast P90HD is an 8.9 inch WQXGA tablet with a RK3288 CPU
Chinese tablet maker Teclast’s latest device is one of the first tablets to ship with a Rockchip RK3288 processor. But that’s not the only thing that makes the Teclast P90HD tablet special. It also has an 8.9 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel WXGA display, giving it even more pixels than an LG smartphone (although they’re less densely packed in the tablet). [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image] The tablet is up for pre-order in China for ¥1599, or a little over $250 US. It features 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, an 8MP rear camera, 2MP camera, and WiFi and Bluetooth. The Teclast P90HD features Rockchip’s new quad-core ARM Cortex-A17 processor with ARM Mali-T760 graphics and the tbalet will ship with Android 4.4 KitKat software. Rockchip’s new processor isn’t actually shipping just yet, but it should be available in a few weeks when the Teclast P90HD and a number of other tablets and TV boxes with RK3288 CPU are expected to ship. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]
prima.king Serial Newser
Messages : 2171 Réputation : 100 Inscrit le : 30/06/2013
Nouveau record AnTuTu ! Et cette fois-ci ce n’est pas le Xshot Mais bien une tablette dont je vous parlais dans la Saga Pipo. La Pipo P1 et son magnifique processeur nouvelle génération, le RK3288 de Rockchip prennent ainsi le dessus sur les terminaux basés sous Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 mais aussi sur celui du désormais célèbre miPad de Xiaomi équipé du SoC Tegra K1. Avant de développer la news en détail, rappelons que le score du Xshot au-dessus de 40 000 pts a été revu à la baisse pour la version finale et s’apparente désormais à celui du Xplay 3S. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image] Des résultats AnTuTu compilés entre ces trois appareils de résolutions identiques sont sortis récemment des internets. Ils comparent la tablette PIPO P1 et le miPad de Xiaomi qui ont une résolution de 2048 x 1536 pixels mais aussi le Vivo Xplay 3S d’une résolution non égale mais similaire de 2560 x 1440 pixels. La guerre et déclarée entre les processeurs de dernière génération ! Le Snapdragon 801 MSM8974 AC (le plus puissant) du Vivo, le Tegra K1 du miPad et le RK3288 de la Pipo! Mais qui va gagner ?! [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image] Sur la 3D, on attendait le RK3288 en tête car possédant le GPU monstre Mali T720 mais c’est bien le miPad prend la première place devant le SD801. Dans ce domaine ainsi que dans celui de la gestion 2D, ils se tiennent quand même dans un mouchoir de poche. Sur le plan des stats cumulé de la RAM (ram1 et ram2), le ViVo cumule environ 30% de point en plus que les deux autres qui se tiennent la cordes. Tout cela est normal car le Vivo possède 3GB de RAM et les deux autres 2GB. Notons seulement que sur la ram1, celle rendant compte de la capacité de calcul globale, le RK3288 se détache nettement du Tegra K1. Le CPU1, donnant les notes du CPU global, montre encore la Pipo P1 devant mais quasiment à égalité avec le miPad tandis que le Xplay3S est un peu derrière. Cette info n’est pas minime car c’est la première fois qu’un processeur SnapDragon 801 se fait passer devant par un autre SoC dédié aux terminaux mobiles ! En l’occurrence 2 SoC d’un coup ici. Sur la gestion d’Android pure le Rockship est encore devant mais la ou les deux autres prennent la claque de leur vie c’est dans la gestion multitâches ! le RK3288 de la Pipo P1 réussit la prouesse de scorer 12 892 pts soit 25% de plus que le Tegra K1 et quasiment 50% de plus que le SD801 du Xplay 3S !! Manque l’addition de tous ces chiffres ! Et bien les voici tout bien classés
Pipo P1 (RK3288) avec 42 593 pts WORLD RECORD mesdames et mesdames !
miPad (Tegra K1) avec 39 263 pts
Vivo Xplay3S (SnapDragon 801 74ac) avec 36 576
Alors la, les pros du chipset me disent en fronçant les sourcils : « mais bien sûr ! ils ont juste trempé la Pipo dans de l’azote liquide pour booster les résultats ! » Et là je réponds, c’est possible ! Car théoriquement une architecture ARM cortex A15 (Tegra K1) est plus puissante qu’une A17 (RK3288). Mais tout ne se joue pas que sur l’architecture ! Il y a aussi les qualités et le nombre des communications entre les cœurs et leurs affinités à travailler ensemble dans le montage du Processeur. Certes la plupart des tests observés sous AnTuTu s’élevait jusqu’ici à maximum 10 000 pts et en moyenne 6500 pts. Mais nouvelle génération oblige, le RK3288 pourrait bien changer la donne dans l’expérience Android ! Pour conclure disont que cela reste du AnTuTu, est qu’il ne faut pas non plus donner le bon dieu sans confession à la Pipo et au RK3288. Le travail logiciel des marques jour beaucoup sur l’expérience finale des utilisateurs. Pipo est solide mais aussi réputée pour avoir quelque bug mineur dans ses tablettes de générations précédentes, reste à tester cela en grandeur nature ! La première tablette sous RK3288 devrait sortir début Juin, et ce ne sera pas forcément la Pipo P1 car la marque Teclast est aussi sur le coup. Et je vous en parlerais bientôt. Etes-vous surpris par ce résultat ?
je sais pas si antutu est fiable ou si il y a overclocking, mais il est puissant, et le prix fera la différence. Sur une future tablette JXD, ça risque d'être très puissant. Par contre je suis un peu quiche en rockchip, il existe des téléphone avec cette puce 3288 ou c'est juste tablette ?
AndroGamesFR Accro'
Messages : 335 Réputation : 5 Inscrit le : 19/03/2014
Attention au benchmark Antutu ils sont peu fiables, surtout quand ça vient d'un constructeur. Il est peu probable que le RK3288 soit meilleur que K1, ce n'est pour moi qu'impossible....Il sera à peine meilleur que le Snapdragon 800 donc Attention !
prima.king Serial Newser
Messages : 2171 Réputation : 100 Inscrit le : 30/06/2013
Rien n'est moins sûr, les puces graphiques des prochains SOC Intel seraient déjà supérieurs à celles des S801 voir S805 [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]
Rockchip pourrait proposer une belle surprise, de plus si Intel les a choisi pour partenaire, cela démontre qu'ils ont de quoi faire valoir
AndroGamesFR Accro'
Messages : 335 Réputation : 5 Inscrit le : 19/03/2014
Pour Ifive, aucune idée, je les avais contacté, il y a peu, pour cette tablette....et ils ne veulent pas m'en fournir...Tous leurs produits seraient réservés pour un revendeur??? Pour pipo, on verra ça, car je devrais en proposer quand les nouvelles tablettes seront disponible... Teclast...ben ils m'ont jamais répondu...
prima.king Serial Newser
Messages : 2171 Réputation : 100 Inscrit le : 30/06/2013
Pour Ifive, aucune idée, je les avais contacté, il y a peu, pour cette tablette....et ils ne veulent pas m'en fournir...Tous leurs produits seraient réservés pour un revendeur??? Pour pipo, on verra ça, car je devrais en proposer quand les nouvelles tablettes seront disponible... Teclast...ben ils m'ont jamais répondu...
et pour le suivi logiciel, tu as une préférence, un équivalent à Minix chez ces fabricants ?
Belchine Revendeur/Partenaire Certifié
Messages : 4471 Réputation : 234 Age : 47 Inscrit le : 12/05/2012
In the previous years, you’d normally learn about new devices as they get listed on Alibaba or Aliexpress, and that’s how I built my – now very incomplete – list of Rockchip RK3188 based devices. But now companies seem to be anxious to let people know about their new devices even before they hit the market, and albeit I’ve been told full production of Rokchip RK3288 powered Android TV boxes is only planned by the end of July, many companies are already showing off their new devices, even though only the PCBA may be ready, or in development. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image]Let’s go through the list of Rockchip RK3288 quad core Cortex A17 media devices that’s known (to me) so far:
No brand D368 – HDMI 1.4 TV dongle with 1 or 2 GB RAM, 4, 8 or 16 GB flash, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac + (optional) Bluetooth, and 2x USB host ports.
No brand B368 – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB flash, GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth, 2x USB host ports, and HDMI 1.4 and AV outputs.
Ugoos UM3 – TV box with 2GB RAM (1GB as option), 8 GB flash (16/32GB as option), Wi-fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth 4.0, 3x USB host ports, and HDMI 2.0
Ugoos UT3 – Same as Ugoos UM3, but with 16GB flash by default (option up to 64GB), and adds Gb Ethernet, and HDMI 1.4 input.
Rikomagic MK902 II – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8 or 16 GB flash, GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac, and Bluetooth 4.0, 3x USB host ports, and HDMI and AV outputs.
Zero Devices Z6C – TV box with 2GB RAM, 16 GB flash, GbE, “Broadcom Wi-Fi”, and Bluetooth 4.0, 3x USB host ports, and HDMI output.
Kingnovel K-R68 – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8 GB flash (16/32Gb as option), GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac, and Bluetooth 4.0, 2x USB host ports, and HDMI 2.0 and AV outputs. (Bottom right of the picture above)
MINIX NEO X9 – TV box (rumor)
Sunchip CX-920 and CX-998 – Respectively HDMI TV stick and TV box.
No brand GK388 ($99.99) – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB flash, GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth 4.0, 2x USB host port, and HDMI 1.4 output.
Eny Technology EKB328 – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB flash, GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth 4.0, 2x USB host port, and HDMI 1.4 output.
Artway Q8 – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB flash (16GB as option), GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth 4.0, 2x USB host port, and HDMI 1.4a and AV outputs.
PMD OEM Box – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB eMMC flash (16GB as option), 10/100M Ethernet, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n and Bluetooth 4.0, 3x USB host port, and HDMI 1.4a and AV outputs. It also comes with built-in a 2MP camera.
Starlead Q8 aka Neken M9 – TV box with 2GB RAM, 8GB or 16GB flash, GbE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n/ac and Bluetooth 4.0, 2x USB host port, and HDMI 1.4a and AV outputs.
No prices are normally available, at least from reliable sellers, except for GK388 which is sold for $99.99 on Aliexpress by a seller with lots of positive ratings. But when I try to chat to now inquire about, it seems I was replied in less than a second, most probably by a chat bot, saying “you would get your parcel soon because I am processing your order now ,so we have no time to talk to you” . Anyway with all these companies launching RK3288 mini PCs, prices are likely to be very competitive. All the boxes appears to support both 802.11 b/g/n and 802.11ac and Gigabit Ethernet, except one. From this list the box with the highest specifications seem to be Ugoos UT3 as it features HDMI 2.0 output and HDMI 1.4 input, and a version may be sold with up to 64GB flash. There’s no way I can guarantee the specs are correct, but there are still a lot of boxes that list HDMI 1.4, and not HDMI 2.0, and it’s something you’ll have to check before purchasing one, although it is only important if you have, or plan to buy, a 4K TV, and need 60 fps. I have listed all details of the specs such as micro USB OTG, and optical S/PDIF both of which can be found in most full sized Android TV boxes listed above, and all are said to run Android 4.4 Kitkat.
Rockchip RK3288 Temperature Testing and Antutu Benchmarks [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir ce lien]
There are many upcoming Rockchip RK3288 based devices, and in the listing the CPU frequency varies from 1.6 GHz to 2.0 Ghz. so it’s difficult to know exactly what to expect. Ugoos has done some testing with their UT3 boardmeasuring temperature after Antutu benchmark for different CPU clock frequencies and fan/fanless combinations. [Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image]The board comes with a rather tiny heatsink which may explain some of the results below. They also added a small fan on top in about half the tests to compare the temperature against an heatsink only solution. Without further delays let’s go through the results:
Frequency
Antutu Score
Temperature (heatsink)
Temperature (Back of PCB)
Heatsink only
Heatsink + fan
Heatsink only
Heatsink + fan
1.608 GHz
38655
67 °C
N/A
70 °C
N/A
1.704 GHz
39853
72 °C
50 °C
75 °C
60 °C
1.800 GHz
41440
83 °C
52 °C
85 °C
62 °C
1.920 GHz
43397
86 °C
53 °C
89 °C
64 °C
2.016 GHz
45226
N/A
55 °C
N/A
67 °C
[size] So while it’s correct to say Rockchip RK3288 can reach 45,000+ points in Antutu (resolution: 1920×1080), there likely won’t be any fanless solutions that will be clocked at 2 GHz and achieve that type of performance. From this test, it even looks like the new Rockchip TV boxes are likely to be clocked at 1.6 GHz, unless other companies select larger heatsinks. 38000 points is still a very respectable score in Antutu. [/size]
[Vous devez être inscrit et connecté pour voir cette image] Rockchip RK3288 @ 2.0 GHz (with fan)
[size] There are some products is the wild right now, notably with Nagrace HPH RK3288, and one user reports an Antutu score of “only” 31.328 points, but considers the firmware very fast, and with good XBMC support, but it currently lacks Google Play support, and one of the launcher is in Chinese only, so it’s not quite ready for prime time. If you want one, a group buying is organized via Freaktab for $180 including shipping, This is a version with 4GB RAM, 32GB Flash and HDMI In.[/size]