Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Intel Hardware

First Menlow Board Released 45

nerdyH writes "German board vendor Lippert has unveiled what it claims to be the first motherboard based on Intel's 'Menlow' chipset for ultra-mobile PCs. The CoreExpress-Menlow is smaller than a credit card, yet clocks to 1.5GHz, has 1GB of RAM soldered onboard, has multiple PCI Express lanes, USB 2.0, HD audio, an IDE interface, and a digital LVDS video interface. The board is the first in a proposed 'CoreExpress' standard motherboard form-factor measuring 2.6 by 2.3 inches (65 x 58 mm)."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

First Menlow Board Released

Comments Filter:
  • ...kinda like the idea of not having a massive box on my desk. This is more than welcome.. small form factor is nice.
    • There are more compact desktops. Some even use notebook computers as a desktop.
      • This would be more like using a palm trio as a desktop. 2.5 by 2.3 inches is just a little bigger then your first three finger on one hand side by side and just a little longer then the width. Depending on the size of your hands that is. But it beats most laptop sixes with a stick then laughs at is. Imagine a slimline DVD burner like one you would find in a laptop. Now imagine a desktop powerful computer using on of those and about the total size of a DVD burner you would put in a 5 1/2 inch drive bay minus
        • You mean...just slightly smaller than the Wii sitting on my desk =)
          • Well, yea. Except they need a way to power it. But it could be powererd externaly with a laptop like charger. Run a USB cable to a hardrive drive and plug the monitor in and your good to go.
  • by Enleth ( 947766 ) <enleth@enleth.com> on Friday February 22, 2008 @05:52PM (#22521920) Homepage
    Which is a pity - it would be perfect for a SLAM-capable robot project I've got on hold since half a year because even the crappiest embedded motherboards out there are damn expensive when you want to buy just one or two of them and are a student...
    • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Friday February 22, 2008 @06:10PM (#22522148) Journal
      It's probably slow too. The Ars Technica analysis implied that it would be slower, clock-for-clock, and use more power than most ARM variants. It's a shame, considering that ARM is the most widely deployed architecture that there aren't many boards that are cheap in lots smaller than a thousand. Something like this [compulab.co.il] would be really nice to play with.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Enleth ( 947766 )
        But it would be a lot more than enough to handle the data analysis and mapping, especially with this amount of memory. AVRs, which I'm using now, have their limits, not in the clock speed (16MHz IS a lot for controlling quite a bit of a relatively simple robot's subsystems, a few times that is enough for the whole thing) but in the memory, a whopping 4-16KB of which is build into a typical one. Just no room for any serious data processing - and chasing the robot with a laptop and an RS232 cable attached to
      • The Ars Technica analysis implied that it would be slower, clock-for-clock, and use more power than most ARM variants.

        I think the point of this board that is that proprietary applications for Windows Mobile, which are compiled for ARM, tend to have less functionality than the corresponding proprietary apps for Windows XP, which are compiled for i686. People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.

        • by poot_rootbeer ( 188613 ) on Friday February 22, 2008 @07:13PM (#22522758)
          I think the point of this board that is that proprietary applications for Windows Mobile, which are compiled for ARM, tend to have less functionality than the corresponding proprietary apps for Windows XP, which are compiled for i686. People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.

          Riiiiiiiiiight.

          It was very smart of Intel's engineers to design and implement the CABPWAPF (Clear 'Artificial Barrier to Proprietary Windows App Performance' Flag) instruction that's in the i686 instruction set.

          • I think the point of this board that is that proprietary applications for Windows Mobile, which are compiled for ARM, tend to have less functionality than the corresponding proprietary apps for Windows XP, which are compiled for i686. People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.

            Riiiiiiiiiight.

            It was very smart of Intel's engineers to design and implement the CABPWAPF (Clear 'Artificial Barrier to Proprietary Windows App Performance' Flag) instruction that's in the i686 instruction set.

            This artificial barrier is the i686 instruction set itself. ARM CPUs cannot run applications that have been compiled with x86 instructions without an x86 emulator, and I don't see how an emulator would outperform this native x86 board and use less power.

          • It's not about instruction sets per se. The CE version of Office was built from scratch (as far as I know) for CE back when a CE device had a few megs of memory, a tiny screen and a slow processor. It's not the same codebase as the desktop Office and it is much more limited. And OpenOffice doesn't work on CE either. So the fact is that an x86 device in a handheld does make sense because you get run desktop apps. Now there's no reasom why you couldn't run Desktop MS Office or OpenOffice on a handheld these d
        • People want full-size versions of familiar apps on a pocket-size device, and only a processor with the i686 instruction set can deliver this.

          I hear of a new technology that Von Neumann and Turing are playing around with, called the 'universal computing machine'. Maybe it'll offer the ability to algorithmize and implement computing tasks independent of the engine performing those tasks. I hear that a group of compiler engineers hope to use this 'universal computing machine' to create something called a 'cro

          • Your point is valid, but I think the overriding risk with ARM is that a full version of Windows might never ship on ARM, and if it did, there might not be many applications available. If it's a lot of work to get Windows Vista (or XP) and normal Windows apps running on ARM, Microsoft might prefer to write off ARM entirely rather than overhaul its entire codebase. Microsoft has already decided once before [news.com] that it's cheaper to stay with x86-compatible architectures, even in areas where x86 offers inferior pr
  • So, does it run Android?
  • Power (Score:3, Interesting)

    by corychristison ( 951993 ) on Friday February 22, 2008 @07:16PM (#22522780)
    Well, the article is skimping on details, but does anybody know where I can find more info on the power consumption? I doubt it's anywhere comparable to ARM... speaking of ARM. Anybody know where I can get a small ARM based board? I've been searching and searching, can't seem to find anything that isn't mass-order.
    • Re:Power (Score:5, Informative)

      by lenski ( 96498 ) on Friday February 22, 2008 @08:25PM (#22523292)
      There are several inexpensive ARM boards available in small quantities, look in any recent Linux Journal. I am currently running several systems built by Gumstix [gumstix.com] which work well for me and for my customers.

      I have no financial relationship with Gumstix. I have several of their systems. Cheap, effective, and supported by an exceptionally active, friendly and supportive mailing list.

      Your post doesn't describe required specs or desired features, so it's not easy to know what you're looking for.
    • by topham ( 32406 )
      buy an iPod touch.

      or; buy my Axim x50v

    • by RingDev ( 879105 )
      There's always VIA and the Nano-ITX systems. They are slightly larger than this (10cm x 10cm) but they are available, inexpensive, well tested, and have all the stats published. Check out http://www.mini-itx.com/ [mini-itx.com] for more info and cool cases.

      -Rick
      • ... they use much more than a small ARM based system. The best ITX board I can find is the AMD based ones which are about 5W.

        Arm is generally under 1W.
  • it's the platform for the MID/UMPC/etc. The chipset is Poulsbo and the CPU is Silverthorne. Just setting the record straight on the submitter's summary. :) By the way, you have to love how every component of the system gets a codename as well as the final system.

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

Working...