To be fair, it's relatively easy to use your own exploits/payloads in Kali... That is, if you are elite and come up with your own exploit. It's easier than making your own delivery system. Kali is meant to be the framework you use for pentesting, not to be a script kiddie. That being said, I do agree with you.
I will agree with @leathernluv that Kali is meant to be a framework and starting point for people either entering Pentesting or intermediate pentesters before customizing tool sets, developing exploits, and installing specialized software and tools based on area of expertise. Offensive Security offered a regulated release distro to give users a solid base to build their tool sets and skills from while trying to maintain a level of stability in the OS. While a large number of Kali users may claim to be hackers and barely understand enumeration, bash scripting, or the communications going between clients and stations, there are other distros that can have a similar opinion applied to them. Arch users, while commendable for the expected effort needed to prevent dependency issues, a good many also have an elitist personality trait. Mostly because these few *individuals* often "brag" about using Arch. Some Kali users may claim "1337 haxor" status, and (I wish I could say) everyone who hates Ubuntu looks down on Ubuntu users. My point is this: If you don't like a distro, or users claiming higher status than they possess, you can stick around and make fun of them, you can move on and leave them behind while you go be productive, or you can offer advice and assistance so they develop a good set of skills, and in turn, hopefully grow out of their "am I kewlXD?" phase. I don't mean to start an argument, but we, as technical enthusiasts, should discuss and explore all aspects of the business instead of looking down on others.
I wish they'd have gone with a quad core, like my laptops n4200. I'd definitely buy it if it had that cpu, but the n4020 just doesn't have enough power for much more than light use. I only even know about the n4020 because of a laptop that was recently on sale for $100. Every review stated that it was severely underpowered and suffered on anything other than a light work load. Keep up the great reviews and tutorials. I love your channel.
I've been looking for an inexpensive SBC kind of like this for a very specific reason. I need to run an old version of Mac OS to support a boutique old piece of audio / MIDI hardware, and I currently have a hackintosh system that runs Mac OS 10.11 specifically because the drivers for this thing only work up to that version. It's a MIDI control surface, and Mac OS allows me to natively share it across the network using Audio MIDI Setup. On boot, it runs a piece of AppleScript that automatically fires up Audio MIDI setup and connects the control surface to my main studio rig. The system this runs on is an old i5 that is way overkill for the task. If one of these little x86 SBC's could run Mac OS through OpenCore, there would be no reason to have an entire other ATX system running just for this task. I've already seen someone running MacOS on the LattePanda, but that device is very expensive and $100 would be something I would easily pay. The control surface needs to connect over Firewire 400. Ideally I'd like to build a small custom box that houses an SBC running MacOS a "Mini PCI-E to PCI-E Express 1X Extension Cord Adapter Card with USB Riser Card" to plug in a PCIe FW400 card. I could mount said box right to the control surface itself. I would love to get my hands on one of these and start hacking away.
bruh this thing literally costs $26 dollars a piece to produce by the thousand. they just in this for the money. id rather buy a chromebook and know im adding to a company that knows more about me than i do myself.
@@Dtr146 i'd rather spend 99$ on something that takes up less space, have more features but besides the extra features is the same experience as a chromebook. if you wanna compare chromebooks to SBC the chromebooks first of all gotta drop in price xD
SBCs used to wow me, but I've seen so many of them its just like "Oh, another one...okay." Show me one running 2016's Doom at at least the frame rate the Switch does, then I'll stand up and take notice.
Its pretty awesome. I created their video and had a chance to use it in the process. No issues checking out my high resolution 42mp photos and ran smoothly otherwise too! Very cool concept and I'll be getting one too!
I really like those SBC solutions and your coverage about them! Maybe you could do a "best of" video where you show your favourites/ recommendations of these!? And I don't mean about "all" SBCs you tested, I mean more like the best SBC for media consumption, maybe an windows 10 Alternative as a Desktop replacement, the difference to a lightweight mini computer build like the Asrock A300, maybe your favourite TV streaming solution (chromecast?) or the SBC you would recommend for kids to try stuff (Pi4?). What gives you the less problems? What are you most interested in? What's seems the most reliable in updates/ development? As a rap up for 2020 ... and maybe with an outlook if some major products are in a pipeline (Pi5?, SBCs with Ryzen and Vega?)
Not going to lie, I'm a little disappointed in the amount of RAM they put on it. RAM isn't going to be a super expensive component on the board. Plus RAM is significantly important for onboard graphics. I think 8 GB of RAM would help that board a WHOLE lot. That's just me spitballing though.
In some videos you take power consumption into account. I wish that would become a standard as you do for testing 1080p/4K streaming, and emulation testing. It's my understanding that Intel based SBCs will typically always be a significantly major power draw when compared to a similarly performing ARM based SBC.
Honestly don't care if it's looking similar to the lattepanda alpha/delta, it's considerably affordable and thus accessible to more tinkerers & developers. Such an awesome product to start the new year with!
ETA, don't get me wrong. I am a long time fan of your channel and I appreciate the work you put into reviewing all this good stuff, however I would appreciate it if you could completely finish reviewing the items before moving on to the next one. Just like you used to do in the past. Your pc review of the 4750g and 4650g made me really interested in buying one for my office pc / emulation setup combo. However, the emulation vid for both never released :( No criticism here, just friendly feedback!
It's a little off-topic but I read about a legacy M.2 video card from ASRock yesterday. The Hackboard v2 could run triple 1440p monitors for commercial signage or video feeds. Not as fun as playing games but it would be handy compared to other offerings.
Having purchased the LettePanda Alpha for around $400. This unit looks to be a much better buy. The big problem with the Panda was the poor documentation from the manufacturer. The simplified by BIOS settings was also a disappointment. Hopefully they bring out lots a units to market otherwise it could kill the overall initial excitement.
Rest of mind is when you get all the message going in and out of your bf without his knowledge honestly I really appreciate hacked-Lyneo24 on IG he made it possible for me
I love you your reviews, you should add idle and load power consumption, can be interesting when you want to use this board as permanent vpn/firewall/backup server. (sorry if you did but i didn't understand, my english skills are low)
I kinda wish they were going with a quad core cpu at least, something with decent speeds. This form factor of board would be perfect for a homemade Switch style tablet, especially with a 3d printed case to house it, a battery pack, and a game controller wired to the GPIO pins.
I can see this as being useful for some gpio projects, maybe content consumption using kodi. However I still think the pi's price and lower power consumption is better for web hosting. Sure the faster storage is a plus, but if you care about that for a web server you might as well just buy a full x86_64 machine.
I'm wondering how the dual core CPU in this performs against the quad core in the raspberry pi. Essentially, are all Intel low spec CISC CPU's inherently better than the RISC ARM CPU in the Pi? I'd enjoy seeing a side by side calculation comparison of the two.
For 99$ it doesn't look that amazing, even with the N4020. In 2017 I got a Celeron J3160 quad core with a full aluminum case, swappable RAM and msata drive as well as an additional sata port and power for 2,5" drives. WiFi and dual gigabit ethernet ports. It is twice as big as the HackBoard with a case, but only cost 110$. For emulation purposes I feel that was a better deal. As a maker board with x86 support I can see the appeal of the HackBoard though, since not a lot of x86 systems have the 40-pin gpio header.
A little expensive, but I can see where it can be used as a SBC in many applications. $99 = 3 Rpi3B+ I can buy 3 Raspberry Pi 3B + and utilize them for individual applications, it always works well as a single application unit.
That could make for a nice handheld low power gaming/ streaming device. I think some older or lower end games on Steam could run fine on it. The power supply is a bit of a bummer for battery powered devices though. It´s also nice that it features a dedicated connector for an LCD and touch screen. I think the WiFi module is also a good choice. Really interested how V2 turns out.
I am glad to see more and more of these single board computers.Sad it can't run ps2 though.I started with ps2 in 4k.It's running fine but man gran turismo 4 just tanked in 4k.Best i could do was 1080p(didn't test 1440p yet)
Yes i just compared the 2 and 90% the same as a latepanda delta But cheaper But it got a slower cpu than the delta Less gpio and no data on the m.2 slots ? Are they 4x 2x or only sata ?
Apologies Mr. EtaPrime, but I have a question for you, on the Android box T95 max plus, do I have to get an APEX wireless controller or any wireless controller will do? Also, does the T95 max plus supports MAME arcade games? Thank you!
I mostly agree but thread != core. 4 cores is the way to go now because most software that needs lots of processing time is optimized for 4 or more cores. 2 cores and 4 threads doesn't give much better performance than 2 cores 2 threads because hyperthreading doesn't improve much other than context switching between processes. Multiple cores are needed to actually execute more than one process at exactly the same time.
The review boards are our original HB1 with the N3350. What we are currently crowdfunding is the HB2. It's powered by a Intel N4020 and has 2 x M.2 sockets
Can we install any other OS in the Hackboard.? I mean, if we could buy this board without any OS, then how can we install any OS in this thing? It would be very great if you could do a video on that?
i like how they put the USB slots on the complete opposite-side of the power & HDMI... i wish the Raspberry-Pi did this... ...because it just makes more sense, then your mouse, keyboard, & controllers can be attached to the "front", with everything else in the "back"-side.
@@ETAPRIME yea, i think so, just i want know how much (considered hackboard2) :D i use larkbox a lot, but overtime i realize, that for what i use it, i can use something lower power, like exactly hackboard2, bcz that active cooling on larkbox realy killing me, i am ready to replace it, but if this is possible sufficient for my need, i will drop larkbox for sake of my sanity and pasive cooling what hackboard have, if hackboard2 have like 75% of larkbox power at graphics and cpu, it will be fine for me, i use larkbox for emergenci playing, like overwatch @30fps work prety well, and some other games too, if hackboard2 can handle this too +-, with passive cooling, it will be awesome, if not, i still can use it as media player/server fo my tv, or host some files over network etc, i just need educated gues yes/no from someone like you :D
Temps should be a bit nutters with that tiny cooling solution - any chance that you've try it out with anything overkill - removing the stock out of the equation?
I have a lot of Questions. Im subscribed now. What I understand the turbo can run until it gets to hot. 2.8 GHz is pretty good for a SBC. We need a fan. Ive never had one of these. Is the storage soldered on or can the 64 GB be replaced when it breaks. This has the potential to hurt Raspberry. Im into media and older games. PS2 games would be nice on this. Can this board have a partition with two OS on it?
This looks nearly identical in form factor to the latte panda alpha/delta. It doesn’t seem like it’s made by them or their supplier DFRobot. Wonder what that’s about
I'm not even joking this single board computer is my laptop, the CPU of this is n3350 and my laptop has n3450, they both have 4gb of ram and Intel hd 500 as well
Temptation got the better of me funded it . Wishing that someone would offer the same package sized and features on a snapdragon soc board say a 600 series chip .
I would love to see you talk about a cyber deck or crash recovery device ive been super intrested in building one but im torn between this board and the pi
hi there ETA I know its not related to this videobut maybe you can help me/us out. as our N+ Digi Dock knocks on our doors we are looking for cores to build in. in it sbc boards like pie4 will fit in could you recommend something that has the same size bit has more power under the hood?
I wouldn't mind playing with this, can think of a couple of things that could be fun Also why tf am I obsessed with emulation; like I see a new device and think "OOO how well does it emulate? It'd be fun to play SNES on this" eventhough I can already play friggin' SNES on my pi just fine. xD the eff man
I'd much rather a board that represents a small motherboard, potentially double sided. There's no reason they can't put a CPU socket, memory slot and 2x pcie m.2 on there. Allow us to customise it to the way we want it.
Hrm. At that price point you can do better. The XU4 is RISC not x86 but it’s an octa-core and appears to perform way better than this for $20 less than the Linux version. If you absolutely needed windows 10 maybe this would be a better choice?
Does the m.2 slot here support nvme? It looks like a key B to me but I am not sure Edit: I just checked and it is a key M so it might support nvme but I wonder how is the hackboard 2 going to support 2 m.2 slots? Is it that 1 m.2 slot will be sata only?
This is literally more powerful than most chromebooks and cloudbooks
ikr!
LOL, you broke their website. Forget the slashdot effect, its the ETA Prime effect!
They need to upgrade their web server to the Hackboard 2.
same here :D thought was my problem but looks like they are not ready for all ETA Prime followers xD
It's been a while since I last heard about Slashdot
yes...very embarassing!
@@hackboard2708 Nah, its a badge of honor and a great problem to have!
I just love those people who use Kali Linux and call themselves a hacker.
To be fair, it's relatively easy to use your own exploits/payloads in Kali... That is, if you are elite and come up with your own exploit. It's easier than making your own delivery system. Kali is meant to be the framework you use for pentesting, not to be a script kiddie. That being said, I do agree with you.
Not hacker pentester
I will agree with @leathernluv that Kali is meant to be a framework and starting point for people either entering Pentesting or intermediate pentesters before customizing tool sets, developing exploits, and installing specialized software and tools based on area of expertise. Offensive Security offered a regulated release distro to give users a solid base to build their tool sets and skills from while trying to maintain a level of stability in the OS. While a large number of Kali users may claim to be hackers and barely understand enumeration, bash scripting, or the communications going between clients and stations, there are other distros that can have a similar opinion applied to them.
Arch users, while commendable for the expected effort needed to prevent dependency issues, a good many also have an elitist personality trait. Mostly because these few *individuals* often "brag" about using Arch. Some Kali users may claim "1337 haxor" status, and (I wish I could say) everyone who hates Ubuntu looks down on Ubuntu users.
My point is this: If you don't like a distro, or users claiming higher status than they possess, you can stick around and make fun of them, you can move on and leave them behind while you go be productive, or you can offer advice and assistance so they develop a good set of skills, and in turn, hopefully grow out of their "am I kewlXD?" phase. I don't mean to start an argument, but we, as technical enthusiasts, should discuss and explore all aspects of the business instead of looking down on others.
@@keYserSOze2008 Thanks
@@HopeIntSys gentoo daily drivers are the only true big brains
I wish they'd have gone with a quad core, like my laptops n4200. I'd definitely buy it if it had that cpu, but the n4020 just doesn't have enough power for much more than light use. I only even know about the n4020 because of a laptop that was recently on sale for $100. Every review stated that it was severely underpowered and suffered on anything other than a light work load.
Keep up the great reviews and tutorials. I love your channel.
Definitely looking forward to a full emu review on V2.
Early morning ETA is the best ETA!
With that Gigabit ethernet, the Hackboard 1 would be great for building a headless Sonarr/Radarr file server. Great review, as always, dude!
I've been looking for an inexpensive SBC kind of like this for a very specific reason. I need to run an old version of Mac OS to support a boutique old piece of audio / MIDI hardware, and I currently have a hackintosh system that runs Mac OS 10.11 specifically because the drivers for this thing only work up to that version. It's a MIDI control surface, and Mac OS allows me to natively share it across the network using Audio MIDI Setup. On boot, it runs a piece of AppleScript that automatically fires up Audio MIDI setup and connects the control surface to my main studio rig. The system this runs on is an old i5 that is way overkill for the task. If one of these little x86 SBC's could run Mac OS through OpenCore, there would be no reason to have an entire other ATX system running just for this task. I've already seen someone running MacOS on the LattePanda, but that device is very expensive and $100 would be something I would easily pay. The control surface needs to connect over Firewire 400. Ideally I'd like to build a small custom box that houses an SBC running MacOS a "Mini PCI-E to PCI-E Express 1X Extension Cord Adapter Card with USB Riser Card" to plug in a PCIe FW400 card. I could mount said box right to the control surface itself. I would love to get my hands on one of these and start hacking away.
They should have sent a complete product instead of a prototye that will not be available to consumers
bruh this thing literally costs $26 dollars a piece to produce by the thousand. they just in this for the money. id rather buy a chromebook and know im adding to a company that knows more about me than i do myself.
......
@@Dtr146 No GPIO on a Chromebook
@@Dtr146 i'd rather spend 99$ on something that takes up less space, have more features but besides the extra features is the same experience as a chromebook.
if you wanna compare chromebooks to SBC the chromebooks first of all gotta drop in price xD
I appreciate the LCD connector, it makes this unit readily adaptable to a laptop or all-in-one formfactor.
SBCs used to wow me, but I've seen so many of them its just like "Oh, another one...okay." Show me one running 2016's Doom at at least the frame rate the Switch does, then I'll stand up and take notice.
For something that costs 99$, it's perfect for a Home FTP server, especially with an extra light Arch installation.
R pi better for that, unless you need x86 instructions don't bother buying x86 sbcs
Who uses ftp in 2020? I thought sending credentials in plaintext was 90s tech
@@thefatmoop maybe it's only used for internal network
@@Mecrom then use smb or nfs
@@thefatmoop why does it matter for an internal network?
This looks really awesome 👌
Its pretty awesome. I created their video and had a chance to use it in the process. No issues checking out my high resolution 42mp photos and ran smoothly otherwise too! Very cool concept and I'll be getting one too!
I really like those SBC solutions and your coverage about them!
Maybe you could do a "best of" video where you show your favourites/ recommendations of these!? And I don't mean about "all" SBCs you tested, I mean more like the best SBC for media consumption, maybe an windows 10 Alternative as a Desktop replacement, the difference to a lightweight mini computer build like the Asrock A300, maybe your favourite TV streaming solution (chromecast?) or the SBC you would recommend for kids to try stuff (Pi4?). What gives you the less problems? What are you most interested in? What's seems the most reliable in updates/ development?
As a rap up for 2020 ... and maybe with an outlook if some major products are in a pipeline (Pi5?, SBCs with Ryzen and Vega?)
I was hoping to see an ETA Prime subreddit link in the description.
I'd love to chat with the other viewers!
Not going to lie, I'm a little disappointed in the amount of RAM they put on it. RAM isn't going to be a super expensive component on the board. Plus RAM is significantly important for onboard graphics. I think 8 GB of RAM would help that board a WHOLE lot. That's just me spitballing though.
In some videos you take power consumption into account. I wish that would become a standard as you do for testing 1080p/4K streaming, and emulation testing. It's my understanding that Intel based SBCs will typically always be a significantly major power draw when compared to a similarly performing ARM based SBC.
I keep thinking these SBC's could become custom pc gaming tablets in the right hands and the right 3d printer
IMO ReactOS would do well to release as the main OS FOR a dedicated SBC
@@darunealbane lol, reactos can't even work outside a VM and you want that garbo to give a decent experience in a single board computer
@@LovelyAlanna i had it running live
@@darunealbane LMAO, linux with wine and proton works better than ReactOS, it's unfortunately software garbage
(٥↼_↼)
@@inlinesk8r477 for the "elite" of computer users .. normal people nope
Connection and Network activity seems pretty good with that board
Honestly don't care if it's looking similar to the lattepanda alpha/delta, it's considerably affordable and thus accessible to more tinkerers & developers. Such an awesome product to start the new year with!
This thing is about Twice the Price of the Atomic Pi but also the same time twice the power of it, still AWESOME!
ETA, don't get me wrong. I am a long time fan of your channel and I appreciate the work you put into reviewing all this good stuff, however I would appreciate it if you could completely finish reviewing the items before moving on to the next one. Just like you used to do in the past. Your pc review of the 4750g and 4650g made me really interested in buying one for my office pc / emulation setup combo. However, the emulation vid for both never released :( No criticism here, just friendly feedback!
It's a little off-topic but I read about a legacy M.2 video card from ASRock yesterday. The Hackboard v2 could run triple 1440p monitors for commercial signage or video feeds. Not as fun as playing games but it would be handy compared to other offerings.
Having purchased the LettePanda Alpha for around $400. This unit looks to be a much better buy.
The big problem with the Panda was the poor documentation from the manufacturer. The simplified by BIOS settings was also a disappointment.
Hopefully they bring out lots a units to market otherwise it could kill the overall initial excitement.
Intel + Microsoft. Hmm... We talk about outgoing hacking or incoming? I'm confused.
Rest of mind is when you get all the message going in and out of your bf without his knowledge honestly I really appreciate hacked-Lyneo24 on IG he made it possible for me
How many small form factor computers do you have in your house? You must be using Raspberry Pi's for door stops and paperweights by now :-D
xD
Your my favorite youtuber!
Real best interesting channel ever
Advertisements that try to emulate a RUclips video are the bane of my existence.
With the gemini lake cpu this would make a great budget plex/jellyfin server!!
I love you your reviews, you should add idle and load power consumption, can be interesting when you want to use this board as permanent vpn/firewall/backup server. (sorry if you did but i didn't understand, my english skills are low)
I kinda wish they were going with a quad core cpu at least, something with decent speeds. This form factor of board would be perfect for a homemade Switch style tablet, especially with a 3d printed case to house it, a battery pack, and a game controller wired to the GPIO pins.
I can see this as being useful for some gpio projects, maybe content consumption using kodi. However I still think the pi's price and lower power consumption is better for web hosting. Sure the faster storage is a plus, but if you care about that for a web server you might as well just buy a full x86_64 machine.
I'm wondering how the dual core CPU in this performs against the quad core in the raspberry pi. Essentially, are all Intel low spec CISC CPU's inherently better than the RISC ARM CPU in the Pi? I'd enjoy seeing a side by side calculation comparison of the two.
essentially, yes, intel low end cpus run faster, than arm cpus of rpi. it's no brainer. i like both arm and x86, but x86 is faster.
X86 SBCs should consider power supply circuit before cramping cpu into slightly smaller form factor
For 99$ it doesn't look that amazing, even with the N4020. In 2017 I got a Celeron J3160 quad core with a full aluminum case, swappable RAM and msata drive as well as an additional sata port and power for 2,5" drives. WiFi and dual gigabit ethernet ports. It is twice as big as the HackBoard with a case, but only cost 110$. For emulation purposes I feel that was a better deal. As a maker board with x86 support I can see the appeal of the HackBoard though, since not a lot of x86 systems have the 40-pin gpio header.
A little expensive, but I can see where it can be used as a SBC in many applications.
$99 = 3 Rpi3B+
I can buy 3 Raspberry Pi 3B + and utilize them for individual applications, it always works well as a single application unit.
That could make for a nice handheld low power gaming/ streaming device. I think some older or lower end games on Steam could run fine on it. The power supply is a bit of a bummer for battery powered devices though. It´s also nice that it features a dedicated connector for an LCD and touch screen. I think the WiFi module is also a good choice. Really interested how V2 turns out.
Two years later and still on pre-order, wondering if this will actually be released with the ongoing chip shortages
Besides the better cpu the only thing this is missing is a 2nd ethernet port, it will then truly make this a jack of all trades board.
I am glad to see more and more of these single board computers.Sad it can't run ps2 though.I started with ps2 in 4k.It's running fine but man gran turismo 4 just tanked in 4k.Best i could do was 1080p(didn't test 1440p yet)
Is it me or this thing looks like a lattepanda alpha and Delta without the fan and it's a green PCB instead of black
It looks way larger than the Lattepanda devices, but with the same connections (except no USB-C).
Yes i just compared the 2 and 90% the same as a latepanda delta
But cheaper
But it got a slower cpu than the delta
Less gpio and no data on the m.2 slots ? Are they 4x 2x or only sata ?
It's like a lattepanda alpha-lite
@@MicLKH minus the battery connector
@@HandheldHardware It has one, differently placed I guess, next to what looks like empty solder pads for a micro usb or something similar
The Crowdsupply link is returning 404 Not Found
same here
The website is broken try again later
You choose good topics bro
7:57 His favorite game.
Although I would love to see an 8GB ram model, but still at least it looks like it's dual channel
Cool!
I'm really looking forward to a review of the HackBoard 2 when it becomes available.
I pre-ordered the kit and I've been notified that my order should be delivered in a couple weeks .
Apologies Mr. EtaPrime, but I have a question for you, on the Android box T95 max plus, do I have to get an APEX wireless controller or any wireless controller will do? Also, does the T95 max plus supports MAME arcade games? Thank you!
N3350 was use for Batocerra from the Lenovo Notebook
Looks promising for Hakboard2. Then we can compare it against other sbc .
4 thread is the way to go these days dual cores are so unacceptable now
I mostly agree but thread != core. 4 cores is the way to go now because most software that needs lots of processing time is optimized for 4 or more cores. 2 cores and 4 threads doesn't give much better performance than 2 cores 2 threads because hyperthreading doesn't improve much other than context switching between processes. Multiple cores are needed to actually execute more than one process at exactly the same time.
Is there any cheap x86 board that could be used just for windows xp and lower?
Hello, thank you for your review. but on this card
Doesn't it need to have 2 X M2 slots?
The review boards are our original HB1 with the N3350. What we are currently crowdfunding is the HB2. It's powered by a Intel N4020 and has 2 x M.2 sockets
Can we install any other OS in the Hackboard.? I mean, if we could buy this board without any OS, then how can we install any OS in this thing? It would be very great if you could do a video on that?
We are unaware of any restrictions on which OS you can run on the board.
i like how they put the USB slots on the complete opposite-side of the power & HDMI... i wish the Raspberry-Pi did this...
...because it just makes more sense, then your mouse, keyboard, & controllers can be attached to the "front", with everything else in the "back"-side.
thank you....that's exactly why we did it. Makes the most sense for usability!
Heyyou . Waiting on my order .
I wish someone create a sbc with a ryzen cpu
I hope that the Raspberry Pi 5 will support M.2 2280 storage, even if the Foundation has to increase the size.
can you test this and compare to chuwi larkbox?
The larkbox is a more powerful unit for sure
@@ETAPRIME yea, i think so, just i want know how much (considered hackboard2) :D i use larkbox a lot, but overtime i realize, that for what i use it, i can use something lower power, like exactly hackboard2, bcz that active cooling on larkbox realy killing me, i am ready to replace it, but if this is possible sufficient for my need, i will drop larkbox for sake of my sanity and pasive cooling what hackboard have, if hackboard2 have like 75% of larkbox power at graphics and cpu, it will be fine for me, i use larkbox for emergenci playing, like overwatch @30fps work prety well, and some other games too, if hackboard2 can handle this too +-, with passive cooling, it will be awesome, if not, i still can use it as media player/server fo my tv, or host some files over network etc, i just need educated gues yes/no from someone like you :D
Temps should be a bit nutters with that tiny cooling solution - any chance that you've try it out with anything overkill - removing the stock out of the equation?
Big thanks for the video btw!
I have a lot of Questions. Im subscribed now. What I understand the turbo can run until it gets to hot. 2.8 GHz is pretty good for a SBC. We need a fan. Ive never had one of these. Is the storage soldered on or can the 64 GB be replaced when it breaks.
This has the potential to hurt Raspberry. Im into media and older games. PS2 games would be nice on this.
Can this board have a partition with two OS on it?
This looks nearly identical in form factor to the latte panda alpha/delta. It doesn’t seem like it’s made by them or their supplier DFRobot. Wonder what that’s about
Hackboard 2 comes with not-so-ancient N4020 dual-core Celeron.
It's a 2019 refresh you're right
And how about heatsink just with double tape, is it enough to prevent thermothrotling cpu?
I would be interested in a comparison between the production board and a Pi for OMV.
Will they treat it like they did with the Minnowboards though?
I'm not even joking this single board computer is my laptop, the CPU of this is n3350 and my laptop has n3450, they both have 4gb of ram and Intel hd 500 as well
the one on Crowdsupply is the N4020 up to 2.8!
My tablet is even slower I have Intel atom x5 and I can't even run roblox
For peak absurdity, could you use an M.2-to-PCIe adapter to connect a discrete graphics card?
Will it play Runescape, or Diablo3?
Can it run Crysis ?
It's processor is in the same lvl of rpi4b, but performance in linux n w10 is way better
Run crysis?
Temptation got the better of me funded it . Wishing that someone would offer the same package sized and features on a snapdragon soc board say a 600 series chip .
efficient small computer!
What about a review on a RAID capable board? or an inexpensive add on card
I wonder why they chose 3 usb over 4. 4 usb controller connects would be nice.
Mainly cost .
Very promising. I love those little guys.
Ite interesting but not enough ram for windows and would be much better with a qwad core four threads celeron
You should try 1440p resolution video.
Nice video. Think that you can do a video on powering multiple Pi 4's on the same power supply at the same time?
Are we able to give it a little more wattage in the bios?
I wonder if one could install old Windows, like W98se or at least XP32.
Are the M.2 slots SATA or NVMe?
NVMe
@@hackboard2708 Cool. Just wanted to make sure. Is there a potential for a metal case/heatsink that will also act as a chip sink for the M.2 SSDs?
I would love to see you talk about a cyber deck or crash recovery device ive been super intrested in building one but im torn between this board and the pi
Bmax b2 is a good alternative for only 117€ (8gb ram, 128gb storage and additional m2 slot)
hi there ETA I know its not related to this videobut maybe you can help me/us out.
as our N+ Digi Dock knocks on our doors we are looking for cores to build in.
in it sbc boards like pie4 will fit in could you recommend something that has the same size bit has more power under the hood?
Did you update Intel Drivers first ?
only 4 gb ram and only dual core?
that too low for anything.
I really would love to see a 8gb Ram version
Ow, the links for Hackboard don't work. >_
I love a broad that takes on all comers.
Can’t get into the website
I wonder if GamerOS works on it, a Small power console like running old or light steam games. If I remember it comes with emulator.
I wouldn't mind playing with this, can think of a couple of things that could be fun
Also why tf am I obsessed with emulation; like I see a new device and think "OOO how well does it emulate? It'd be fun to play SNES on this" eventhough I can already play friggin' SNES on my pi just fine. xD the eff man
Wait, you need to compare this to the lattepanda delta and alpha!
I'd much rather a board that represents a small motherboard, potentially double sided. There's no reason they can't put a CPU socket, memory slot and 2x pcie m.2 on there. Allow us to customise it to the way we want it.
I wonder if people buying SBCs really just use them to watch youtube and play games. You might think there are better products suited for that.
Hrm. At that price point you can do better. The XU4 is RISC not x86 but it’s an octa-core and appears to perform way better than this for $20 less than the Linux version. If you absolutely needed windows 10 maybe this would be a better choice?
Does the m.2 slot here support nvme? It looks like a key B to me but I am not sure
Edit: I just checked and it is a key M so it might support nvme but I wonder how is the hackboard 2 going to support 2 m.2 slots? Is it that 1 m.2 slot will be sata only?
NVMe
@@hackboard2708 How are there 3 usb 3 ports though? Are the last 2 pci gen 2 lanes converted to provide 1 extra usb port?
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