SpacemiT K3 RISC-V Boards From Banana Pi and Radxa Pack 60 TOPS of AI Performance
Banana Pi and Radxa launch SpacemiT K3 RISC-V dev boards with 60 TOPS AI acceleration and up to 32GB LPDDR5, capable of running 30B-parameter models locally.
Banana Pi and Radxa launch SpacemiT K3 RISC-V dev boards with 60 TOPS AI acceleration and up to 32GB LPDDR5, capable of running 30B-parameter models locally.
WeAct Studio's new CH32V006 dev board packs 8KB RAM and 62KB flash into a 3 cm footprint for just $2, making RISC-V experimentation remarkably affordable.
Telink's new TL3228 MCU packs dual RISC-V cores, Bluetooth 6.0 with Channel Sounding, and multi-protocol support for Matter, Thread, and Zigbee into a power-efficient chip targeting smart home and IoT applications.
This compact industrial SBC combines Arm Cortex-A7 and RISC-V cores with dual Gigabit Ethernet and optional PoE in a 6.8 cm by 5.5 cm form factor.
The Clintech Pico Board is the first development board using the Raspberry Pi RP2354B chip with 2MB on-chip flash, exposing all 48 GPIO pins in a Pico-compatible form factor.
The compact Avaota F2 board debuts Allwinner's RISC-V V861 processor with 4K camera support, motor control for PTZ applications, and a 1 TOPS AI accelerator in an open-source design.
This three-key Hall-effect keypad offers 0.05 mm actuation points and 8,000 Hz polling for ultra-responsive rhythm game input.
Telink's ML9118A module combines Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, and Matter support in a compact 25.5 x 18 mm package with dual-core RISC-V processor for smart home devices.
Olimex's new ESP32-P4-PC crams HDMI, Ethernet, four USB ports, and a MIPI camera interface onto a 90x60mm open source development board for just $29 (€25).
Bit-Brick's K1 and K1 Pro are near-identical boards offering a rare side-by-side choice between RISC-V and Arm processors at nearly the same $163-$165 price.
Deep Computing's third RISC-V mainboard for the Framework Laptop 13 brings one of the first RVA23-compliant processors and Ubuntu 26.04 LTS support.
A new open source AI assistant runs on $10 RISC-V boards with under 10 MB of RAM, booting in one second flat.
This $43 Linux stick runs Zigbee2MQTT and Node-RED directly, no Raspberry Pi required. It combines RISC-V processing with Matter and Thread support.
This Raspberry Pi CM4-compatible module ditches ARM for an 8-core RISC-V processor, bringing open-source computing to the compact compute module form factor.