LattePanda debuted their Intel Processor N100-powered LattePanda Mu modules last year, pairing the processor with ample RAM and on-board eMMC.…
LattePanda
The LattePanda Mu is the company’s first foray into SoM territory, packing an affordable Intel Processor N100 CPU and seemingly attempting to give the swathes of ARM-based SoMs a run for their money. It’s a crowded and competitive field, with almost every major SBC manufacturer offering some sort of module-based option.
Starting at $579, the LattePanda Sigma is really expensive. Not just for an SBC — at almost $600 (and more than that in some configurations), it’s a genuinely pricey bit of kit. But, with a 13th Gen Intel Core i5 CPU and up to 32 GB of LPDDR5 RAM, it’s much closer in specs to a fully-fledged desktop computer than its form-factor would initially suggest.
We love SBCs. They are perfect platforms to start tinkering with. Offering good specs, low/level hardware access and little-to-no long term consequences if things go awfully awry (it’s reasonably simple to format the main boot drive and start all over), it’s easy to see why they became staples of the maker community.
The LattePanda Team launched the world’s thinnest pocket-sized hackable computer – LattePanda 3 Delta with global electronic components distributors. The collaboration will ensure that the product choice for LattePanda 3 Delta is passed on to customers through quick, easy online selection via the website of global electronic components distributors and LattePanda.
Continuing our series on single-board computers, we’ve come across a new contender on the market. LattePanda is not a new name in this field, with the original LattePanda debuting way back in 2016. Since then, the brand made a name for itself by being the first x86-based commercially available single-board computer.