BeagleBoard-X15
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
In stock since probably a few months. Pro: Con: Seems to be closed to IGEPv5/Titanium. But with the HDMI Nota: the HDMI port of the IGEPv5 seems to be limited to 2048×1440 points. Really? No 2560×1440? |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Everything with OMAP5 is limited to comparatively low resolutions, this is not an HDMI problem or a board problem but a TI/SoC problem. Just the continuation of the disappointments video-wise starting with OMAP3 (remember the BeagleBoard resolution disaster?). |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
At the time of RO appearing on the Beagleboard, exactly how many in production alternatives were there? |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Some. Your point being? |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Which resolution disaster? Or the fact that my xM can’t run my 1280×1024 monitor at full resolution? FWIW, I tend to regard Ti products as being a bit <insert preferred euphemism for excrement>. To drag up the ghost of my old PVR, the TMS320DM320 is quoted as being capable of encoding/decoding D1 video. That means 720×576 at 50Hz, or 720×480 at 60Hz (both of which equal 20,736,000 pixels per second). Maybe it can on the carefully crafted testbed setup? Likewise the OMAP3. You’re good to go if you want to drive an 800×600 monitor (which was the resolution I was originally using on my RiscPC a long time prior) but getting HD out of a device with a technically better processor than the original Pi? Ain’t gonna happen. To a degree, this is all determined by the intention of the hardware and its time of manufacture. The OMAP is used in several mobile phones (such as my first Android, the Motorola DEFY) and it does a reasonable job. Display technology wasn’t up to so much back then, so in 2010 a phone released with a 3.7" 854×480 screen wasn’t seen as comically bad. Not great, not awful, just normal. Of course, the DEFY is my only phone that isn’t capable of HD video so you can see some limitations in the processor, but again, HD video was a sort of fledgling thing. Credit to Motorola for not doing something nasty like HD MJPEG. The BCM2xxx’s video capabilities are impressive. They had to be, it was it’s raison d’être. But, as Steve points out – in the Beagle days there were no viable alternatives. There was an Octa-something board with a spec so silly I wonder if it ever actually made production. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
Correct wavelength.
Some people seem to have forgotten the famine years, before Beagleboard there was… ? |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
The completely inadequate capability of providing a state-of-the-art video output. Like FullHD@60Hz. Instead, it could not even do 1280×1024@60Hz (apart from a few hand-picked Beagles)! Of course you might say that OMAP3 and BeagleBoard were not developed as a desktop CPU – that was never my point. But there were SoCs available at that time with a lot better video support. Freescale’s stuff, and there were various Marvell XScale CPUs (mostly Kirkwood-based) with PCIex support which were put on boards with more powerful GPU stuff, e.g. various Globalscale Plug variants, and a nice board named OpenRD Client (and later OpenRD Ultimate). And NVidias Tegra of course. Remember the Toshiba AC100? Me saying that the OMAPs provide weak video support does not imply anything else. Like “oh we should have/could have ported RISC OS to something much better” or “TI were braindead”. On the other hand, TI didn’t achieve enough market success to continue the OMAP line of SoCs, so maybe the were braindead after all. |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
Omap5’s PHY supports 4×4K, but each framebuffer is limited to 2×4K. |
Dave Higton (1515) 3525 posts |
My BBxM is driving a Xerox LCD monitor at 1280 × 1024, 52 Hz, beautifully. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
52Hz. Evidently the chip didn’t have the grunt to manage that at the usual 60Hz, so you require a monitor that can handle less common frame rates… BTW – could you post your MDF? Worth a second try, even though the sync rate claimed is 60-75Hz. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
You could sell that screen for a lot of money to frustrated MIST users. |
Dave Higton (1515) 3525 posts |
Here’s the relevant section: startmode mode_name:1280 x 1024 x_res:1280 y_res:1024 pixel_rate:83000 h_timings:32,108,14,1280,0,98 # VESA:136,160,0,1024,0,24 v_timings:5,16,0,1024,0,0 sync_pol:0 endmode HTH. It’s a Xerox XA7-17i, if the information is of any use to you.
Who? |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Thanks. |