<p dir="ltr">On Feb 7, 2016 3:22 AM, "Peter Robinson" <<a href="mailto:pbrobinson@gmail.com">pbrobinson@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
> things like<br>
> the PINE64 above it has a SoC attached network but not storage.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Both SATA (real TB+ disks) and Ethernet (external Wi-Fi AP antennae) are icing-on-the-cake we will both strongly consider.</p>
<p dir="ltr">> As is stands at the moment some of the best cheap devices for server<br>
> style devices is AllWinner A20 devices (CubieTruck, BananaPi and<br>
> friends) and i.MX6 devices (Wandboard, CuBox-i and friends)</p>
<p dir="ltr">Hugely helpful.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Key criterion for offline/remote deployments: does this accept 128GB MicroSD cards, so 2016's developing world $50-100 "knowledge hotspots" increasingly now become very real? (Aside: 256GB MicroSD cards will be part of this well before 2020, apparently beyond the capability of most of these SoC's.)</p>
<p dir="ltr">Peter, does Fedora 24 have a shot to one day run on the "$19" Pine64 Plus?! Even if it's ambiguous whether it can truly contain 2GB RAM as advertised, Pine64 claims to run up to 70C which is very promising if true. ($15 Pine64 contains 512MB, and $19 "Pine64 Plus" contains 1GB RAM. Their 2GB RAM story is very attractive, but may be marketing vaporware for now?)</p>
<p dir="ltr">Or...would you recommend other ruggedized platforms to run Fedora, for schools/libraries/clinics needing this in place by January 1st 2017? (Thankfully size does not matter. Cubox is very cute, and we will use it if it's the most rugged, but physically larger units are also fine too. Certainly Fedora remains a priority for now, given <a href="http://schoolserver.org">schoolserver.org</a>'s obvious OLPC legacy +)<br>
</p>