[Updated Jul 31] — Intel and CircuitCo revealed a smaller, faster, second-gen MinnowBoard SBC featuring an Atom E3800 SoC, revised I/O, and both Android 4.4 and Linux support.



Intel announced its open source MinnowBoard in April 2013 and shipped it for $199 in July. Built by CircuitCo and backed by Intel’s Minnowboard.org community, the Linux-ready single board computer is now available for $189. The new MinnowBoard Max, due early in the third quarter, blows past the original on price, performance, and energy consumption, while shrinking size from 4.2 x 4.2 inches to 3.9 x 2.9 inches.







MinnowBoard Max

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E3800 SoC block diagram

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BeagleBone Black

The updated SBC’s Atom E3800 (Bay Trail-I) is faster than the earlier Atom E640 processor, offers better graphics, and provides lower power consumption. Unlike the E640, the E3800 is a full system-on-chip with an integrated controller, as well as Intel HD Graphics. The SoC is also 64-bit, making the Max one of the few 64-bit hacker SBCs available, as well as one of the few open x86-based boards. Intel also sells an open source Galileo SBC with Arduino compatibility based on its low-power, Pentium-compatible Quark processor.The MinnowBoard Max’s design appears to support the full range of 22nm-fabricated Atom E3800 processors, which include single-, dual-, and quad-core SoCs, with clockrates up to 1.91GHz and TDPs ranging from 5 to 10 Watts. Two standard boards are being offered initially: a $99 based on the 1.46GHz single-core E3815 (5W TDP) along with 1GB RAM, and a $129 version incorporating the dual-core E3825 (6W TDP) accompanied by 2GB RAM.

Like the BeagleBone Black, the MinnowBoard tightened up its feature set slightly in order to reduce the price. Beagleboard.org was responding to pressure from the $25/$35 Raspberry Pi when it almost halved the price of the Black to $45.

According to David Anders, Senior Embedded Systems Engineer at CircuitCo, a Ft. Worth, Texas based company that also manufactures the BeagleBone Black, the MinnowBoard Max is not intended to compete directly with the Raspberry Pi. Yet, the SBC is certainly likely to reach a wider audience with its $99 price.

The original MinnowBoard acted as a set of “training wheels,” both for CircuitCo, which was new to x86-based boards, and Intel, which was new to open hacker boards, Anders told LinuxGizmos. Lessons learned on the original have helped steer the path to the Max, he added.

The Max should also attract developers who like their hacker SBCs as open source as possible. With its firmware roots in the Yocto Project, the Intel-backed Minnowboard.org already offered open source code and Creative Commons licenses for schematics and design files. Now, with the Atom E3800 based Max it also offers “a complete open GPU driver in the mainline kernel” for its Intel HD Graphics, says Anders.









MinnowBoard Max top from two angles, and bottom showing white high-speed expansion connector

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While the original board offered only an Angstrom Linux build based on Yocto Project code, the Max also supports a more generic Debian GNU/Linux, and offers compatibility with Android 4.4. So far, Intel has not pushed the embedded-focused Atom E3800 as an Android platform as much as it has with its mobile Atom versions, like the similarly 22nm Atom Z34xx (Merrifield).



Board shrinks, expansion splits into two connectors

Whereas the original MinnowBoard was limited to 1GB RAM, the MinnowBoard Max supports configurations of 1GB, 2GB, or 4GB. It also advances from DDR2 to DDR3 RAM. SPI flash, used to store its UEFI firmware, has been doubled to 8MB, and instead of NAND flash, you get a microSD slot. Two SATA ports (one on-board) support more robust storage.







MinnowBoard Max simplified block diagram

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As before, coastline I/O includes gigabit Ethernet, micro-HDMI, and two USB host ports, but this time one of the USB interfaces steps up to USB 3.0. A serial debug interface and various GPIO signals (with two supporting PWM) are also available via header connectors. The Max has also lost a few on-board features. Gone are the previous micro-USB OTG and analog audio ports (digital audio is available via the board’s coastline HDMI port).

Whereas previously there was a single, 100-pin expansion connector that supported stackable expansion cards called “Lures,” the Max splits its I/O into two connectors. A 26-pin header connector on the top side for low-speed I/O, and a 60-pin high density connector on the reverse side of the board, for high-speed I/O.







Low-speed I/O header signals

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High-speed I/O connector



The low-speed expansion header is somewhat similar to that of the Raspberry Pi’s 50-pin connector, providing Arduino-like prototyping I/O including I2C, SPI, PWM, I2S, and various UARTs and GPIO, as listed above.Signals included on the white, high-speed expansion connector on the back of the board include a single PCIe Gen 2.0 lane (down from the previous board’s two lanes), a second SATA interface, an additional USB 2.0 host port, GPIO, and JTAG support. Overall, the device has 14 fewer expansion pins, and has lost several of the earlier board’s interfaces including CAN, SMB, and LVDS.



Two new Lure formats

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Like the original MinnowBoard, the Max supports standardized expansion boards, called Lures. However, due to the Max’s new use of dual expansion connectors — dedicated to low-speed and high-speed signals, respectively — Lures designed for the original MinnowBoard are incompatible with the Max. Consequently, the MinnowBoard Max introduces two new add-on module formats: low-speed MinnowBoard Max Lures, and high-speed MinnowBoard Max Lures.

“Since the low speed connector is very similar to the signals available on most Arduino platforms, a wide range of Arduino Shields that are released under creative commons will be redesigned for MinnowBoard Max,” explains Anders. “This allows developers to take advantage of a wide range of [existing] tutorials as well as easily prototype projects.”

Arduino shields expected to be converted into low-speed Lures include the ADC Shield, PWM Shield, Moto Shield, Relay Shield, and CAN Bus Shield. “We currently have a list of 28 Arduino shields that are released under creative commons that will be redesigned specifically as Lures for the MinnowBoard Max,” Anders told LinuxGizmos. In fact, CircuitCo is developing a Lure similar to the current BeagleBone Audio Cape, which provides various analog audio options.

The Max’s high-speed expansion connector, meanwhile, provides signals that can be used for implementing high-speed Lures that leverage off-the-shelf mini-PCIe and/or mSATA cards, noted Anders.



Summary of specifications

Specifications listed for the current MinnowBoard Max models include:

Processor — Atom E3800 (Bay Trail-I) with Intel HD Graphics: Single-core E3815 @ 1.46GHz (5W TDP) Dual-core E3825 @ 1.33GHz (6W TDP)

RAM — supports 1GB, 2GB, or 4GB DDR3 RAM (depending on model)

Flash — 8MB SPI flash (for UEFI/Coreboot/etc.)

Coastline I/O: MicroSD slot Micro-HDMI port Gigabit Ethernet port (RJ45) Dual USB ports — 1x USB 3.0 host; 1x USB 2.0 host 1x SATA 3Gb/sec port

Expansion connectors: Low-speed connector (26-pin) — SPI, I2C, I2S audio, 2x UARTs (TTL-level), 8x GPIO (2x supporting PWM), +5V, GND High-speed connector (60-pin) — 1x PCIe Gen 2.0 lane, 1x SATA 3Gb/sec, 1x USB 2.0 host, I2C, GPIO, JTAG, +5V, GND

Other features — serial debug port (header); firmware flash port (header); heatsink; ACPI 5.0 support

Operating temperature — 0 to 70°C

Power — 5VDC

Dimensions — 99 x 74mm (3.9 x 2.9 in.)

Operating system — Debian GNU/Linux; Yocto Project Linux; Android 4.4



Further information

The MinnowBoard Max will go on sale early in the third quarter. Two versions will be offered initially: a $99 entry-level model, with a 1.46GHz single-core E3815 SoC and 1GB RAM; and a $139 model, equipped with a 1.33GHz dual-core E3825 SoC and 2GB RAM. CircuitCo is evaluating demand for a quad-core model, but that has not announced any details or availability yet. Additional information is available at the Minnowboard.org website, and at CircuitCo’s MinnowBoard product page.

