Thanks to the 15mm x 15mm ATSAMA5D27 package from Microchip, this company created a 20mm x 20mm Linux computer roughly the size of a coin.

Small computers have been getting posted over at Hacker News, so I figured I’d share this one here in !technology.

14 points

How do you connect i/o devices to it?

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17 points

You solder them onto the edges.

https://d3s5r33r268y59.cloudfront.net/datasheets/23894/2021-06-09-13-30-09/Hane-SOM-Full_SoM_pinout.pdf

There’s the pinout. This is a common technique for electronics. See Sparkfun for a good tutorial: https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-solder-castellated-mounting-holes/all

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12 points
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If you interested in a bigger volume - we planning stock right now and collecting the orders for Sep-Oct 2021.

Eh? Is this offer outdated or what’s going on here?

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1 point

Time travel.

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1 point

Believe it or not, this is a few years old at this point.

The ATSAMA5D27 from Microchip is the main element at play here, allowing anyone to create mini-Linux computers with relatively low efforts. The SiP means that DDR2 and CPU are married together at the factory, and traditionally this is the hardest part of PCB design.

Since the “hardest job” is done already, a relative beginner could lay out an ATSAMA5D27-based computer. HaneSOM went the other direction: they made the job much much harder by trying to fit everything within 20mm x 20mm space. (by taking advantage of the DDR2 internal layout, there’s no need to “waste space” on that, and therefore pack everything as tightly together as possible).

I know that Rasp. Pi is more popular these days, but I think some people need a custom computer that they solder onto the rest of their design. RP4 has space and power disadvantages over a package like this ATSAMA5D27.

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