BeagleBoard rev.B
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Common manufacturers | Circuitco LLC on behalf of BeagleBoard.org |
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Design firm | Texas Instruments |
Introduced |
BeagleBoard July 28, 2008 BeagleBoard rev.C May 13, 2009 BeagleBoard-xM September 14, 2010 BeagleBone October 31, 2011 BeagleBone Black April 23, 2013 BeagleBoard-X15 November 1, 2015 |
Cost | US$95 to $149 |
Type | Single-board computer |
Processor | ARM Cortex-A8 |
Frequency | 600 MHz to 1 GHz |
Memory | 128 MB to 512 MB |
Connection | USB On-The-Go |
Ports | USB On-The-Go/DVI-D/PC audio/SDHC/JTAG/HDMI |
Power consumption | 2 W |
Weight | ~37 g |
Dimensions | 7.62 cm × 7.62 cm × 1.6 cm |
The BeagleBoard is a low-power open-source single-board computer produced by Texas Instruments in association with Digi-Key and Newark element14. The BeagleBoard was also designed with open source software development in mind, and as a way of demonstrating the Texas Instrument's OMAP3530 system-on-a-chip. The board was developed by a small team of engineers as an educational board that could be used in colleges around the world to teach open source hardware and software capabilities. It is also sold to the public under the Creative Commons share-alike license. The board was designed using Cadence OrCAD for schematics and Cadence Allegro for PCB manufacturing; no simulation software was used.
The BeagleBoard measures approximately 75 by 75 mm and has all the functionality of a basic computer. The OMAP3530 includes an ARM Cortex-A8 CPU (which can run Linux, Minix,FreeBSD,OpenBSD,RISC OS, or Symbian; a number of unofficial Android ports exist), a TMS320C64x+ DSP for accelerated video and audio decoding, and an Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX530 GPU to provide accelerated 2D and 3D rendering that supports OpenGL ES 2.0. Video out is provided through separate S-Video and HDMI connections. A single SD/MMC card slot supporting SDIO, a USB On-The-Go port, an RS-232 serial connection, a JTAG connection, and two stereo 3.5 mm jacks for audio in/out are provided.