The PINE64 board is a $15 quad-core 64-bit 1.2GHz computer with 512MB of RAM, which is quite a bit of power at a very low price. The project has already met (and exceeded by a factor of nearly four) its crowdfunding financial goal, and it only launched today.

It is pretty easy to understand the appeal of the PINE64 board: It is fast and it is cheap. However, the most interesting aspect of the board is not its low cost, it is that this board can output 4K video through HDMI and supports H.264 and H.265 decoding. That makes this board one of the most impressive, inexpensive options for anyone looking to implement high resolution video in their project.

The capability for such high resolution output and processing comes from the two (yes, two) graphics processing cores on MALI GPU. Just like in laptops and desktops, single board computers use GPUs to optimize and handle the computations necessary for video playback, which ultimately lessens the load on the main processor to trivial levels. However, it is not typical for single board computers to have GPUs with multiple cores.

Specs at a Glance

64-bit Quad-core 1.2Ghz ARM Cortex-A53 processor

MALI400 GPU with two processing cores

4k video output through HDMI

512MB of RAM (the 64+ version of the board offers 1GB)

On-board circuitry for battery charging

Built-in realtime clock

2 USB ports

10/100 ethernet (gigabit on the 64+)

MicroSD storage

Runs Linux or Android

5″×3.125″

46 dedicated General Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) pins

3 UARTS, 2 I2C buses, 2 SPI buses, I2S audio, SPDIF out, IR receiver

Not one, not two, but three board configurations

The campaign offers three different hardware configurations: A64, A64+, and the A64+ with 2GB or RAM. The A64 is the $15 version of PINE64 and ships with 512MB of RAM and 10/100 ethernet. The more powerful $19 PINE64 A64+ has 1GB of RAM, supports gigabit ethernet, and has three additional ports for a camera, touch screen, and LCD panel. And, for $10 more, the PINE A64+ with 2GB of RAM costs $29. The smart buy is to purchase the $19 version of the board, it has all the connectors and most projects will be well served with 1GB of RAM.

Software

Currently, both versions of the board can run either Ubuntu Snappy, Lubuntu, Android Lollipop 5.1., or openHAB (a home automation system) and there are plans for Windows support in the future. Since all of the operating systems PINE64 supported at launch are open source, there are already a huge number of existing applications and communities which will be quick to try their code on the new platform.

There aren’t a lot of boards that share specs similar to the PINE64 — the nearest may be the $75 DragonBoard. With those specs, it is a good bet that this board will be used in large scale video projects, DIY tablets, media centers, and even general purpose computing tasks. Tell us in the comments below what you’d use this board to make.

Editor’s note: This post has been updated to reflect a more complete list of specifications and cover the three models of the PINE64 board. A previous version of this post did not list all of the buses on the board and only mentioned two of the three available hardware configurations. Thanks to John Horton for pointing the specs omission and where to find the correct details.