Hi. Does anyone know if Galileo is a competitor to Netduino or are the two different enough to not be "against" each other?
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Galileo
Started by seascan, Feb 05 2014 09:25 PM
3 replies to this topic
#1Posted 05 February 2014 - 09:25 PM Hi. Does anyone know if Galileo is a competitor to Netduino or are the two different enough to not be "against" each other?
#2Posted 05 February 2014 - 09:49 PM
Hi seascan,
I chatted with the Galileo product manager at CES. The board looks like a fun low-end X86 computer to play with, Intel's answer to Raspberry Pi.
We also chatted a little bit about Quark. It's not ready to be built into something like Netduino yet, but someday perhaps an Intel processor will be running inside a Secret Labs product (Netduino, AGENT, or other). They certainly know how to make innovative microprocessors.
Chris
#3Posted 05 February 2014 - 10:20 PM Thanks for the info, Chris.
What is AGENT?
(EDIT) Never Mind! Very cool. #4Posted 10 February 2014 - 08:17 AM I started playing with Galileo in the weekend...and I haven't understood what is the direction for Intel. Galileo seems to be an Arduino Yun board with a big difference. On Arduino Yun you have two microprocessor, one to run Linux and the other like base Arduino (AVR Atmel CPU). On Galileo you have only a x86 based CPU that runs Linux and Arduino sketchs throgh it. It is in the middle between a board for sensoring/actuators systems like Arduino and Netduino and a full mini-PC board like Raspberry Pi. I have a lot of doubts on Galileo ! I have to study it !
Paolo. Paolo Patierno Microsoft MVP on Windows Embedded & IoT Azure Advisor Blog : Embedded101 0 user(s) are reading this topic0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users | ||||||||||||||
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