Path: csiph.com!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: rbowman Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: Russian Attack Drones Using UK CPUs Date: 10 Oct 2025 19:45:16 GMT Lines: 21 Message-ID: References: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Trace: individual.net DKc94jO0mrK2h/yt8daTDQcpuBDjuUEZkqkDl+J5ntc+q/BYpi Cancel-Lock: sha1:1u5W8lMmWX3x048VvOxjtlKXNkM= sha256:B7rcMqNPtIgibenC2zse0TaFXt9HSPBMELxvZdynShg= User-Agent: Pan/0.162 (Pokrosvk) Xref: csiph.com comp.os.linux.misc:75910 On Fri, 10 Oct 2025 08:41:26 +0100, Andy Burns wrote: > You mentioned the UNO Q? > > Lots of products seem to embed various forms of Pi, I'm sure some do the > same with arduino, but I'd struggle to name one, vs several Pi ones I > can think of (Brennan B2/B3 jukebox, piKVM, HomeAssistantYellow) ... The Q is moving into that territory. Whether it is successful remains to be seen. I don't know how much penetration it has but the Portenta X8 is aimed at industrial applications. https://store.arduino.cc/products/portenta-x8 There is a major difference between €47,60 and €223,00. Nothing in the Portenta product line is cheap. The Q gives you a Cortex-A MPU capable of running Debian and a Cortex-M MCO all in one UNO form factor board and a maker friendly price.