• fresh_broccoli 27 minutes ago

    As far as I know, there's still no real RISC-V equivalent to Raspberry Pi, and I think that's what early adopters want the most.

    The closest thing is probably Orange Pi RV2, but it has an outdated SoC with no RVA23 support, meaning some Linux distros won't even run on it. Its performance is also much poorer than of the RPi5.

    • utopiah 3 hours ago

      At the pace every PC component is becoming quite expensive it's not entirely out of the realm of possibilities that my next CPU will be RISC-V based. /s (kind of)

      PS: for those still hesitating to tinker with RISC-V the workflow is becoming quite convenient already, to the point you can "just" boot and install Linux (as mentioned in the article) on it to get a headless server running in minutes.

      • karlkloss 2 hours ago

        As things are now, I can only afford boards that take the RAM modules I inherited from my grandfather.

        • 0x000xca0xfe 2 hours ago

          Luckily this board runs with old DDR4 sticks. If you still have some lying around good for you.

        • greggsy an hour ago

          The board itself looks pretty spartan, at least compared to any other x86 ITX board I’ve seen in the last ten years. The only thing it doesn’t seem to have is audio jacks.

          Is that because the platform itself is very lite, or is just typical for a dev ITX board?

          https://www.cnx-software.com/2026/01/12/milk-v-titan-a-329-o...

          • knorker 2 hours ago

            Oh, no vector extension. Probably a dealbreaker for me.

            • akshitgaur2005 an hour ago

              why?

              • stinkbeetle an hour ago

                Well Linux distros are consolidating around RVA23 target, for one thing (I'm not OP).

            • basemi 3 hours ago