Monday, March 31, 2014

Intel's SD card-sized computer may not be so tiny after all

Back at CES, Intel made a big deal of the fact that it could squeeze a Linux-based PC with Bluetooth and WiFi into the size and shape of an SD card. However, with just a few months to go before the launch of these miniscule Edison development boards, it looks like the chip-maker has changed tack. Instead of being based on the Quark SoC, which was specifically designed for wearables and the Internet of Things, the first Edison products will actually rely on a more traditional Atom chip--in other words, the same sort used many current Windows tablets and hybrids. An Edison PC based on Atom should deliver more grunt and connectivity options compared to Quark, and for less money, but itd be too chubby to ever get accidentally jammed in an SD slot. Thats why Intel has been forced to admit that, while it continues to work on Quark, the Edison devices coming this summer will be "slightly larger" than was first claimed.

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Via: Bit-tech

Source: Intel

Tags: atom, chip, edison, intel, iot, linux, quark, soc, wearables Next: Ultrakam lets your iPhone capture higher resolution film-like video clips. fire. fire-comment-divider

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