At first glance, the Banana Pi BPI-M4 looks like a Raspberry Pi 3 clone. And it kind of is — the single-board computer even has a 40-pin connector that lets you attach Raspberry Pi HAT add-on boards.
But the Banana Pi BPI-MP4 has a different processor with support for 4K video. Like a Raspberry Pi it can use a microSD card for storage, but this model also has 8GB of eMMC flash built-in. And there’s an M.2 Key E slot that you can use to connect a PCIe SSD or other hardware.
SinoVoip is selling the Banana Pi BPI-M4 through AliExpress for $38 plus shipping, making it just a few dollars more expensive than the Raspberry Pi.
Here’s an overview of some of this little computer’s key specs:
- Realtek RTD1395 Arm Cortex-A53 quad-core processor
- Mali-470 MP4 graphics
- 1GB of DDR4 memory
- 8GB eMMC flash storage
- 10/100 Ethernet
- 802.11ac WiFI
- Bluetooth 4.2
- HDMI 2.0b (4K60)
- 3.5mm audio jack
- 4 x USB 2.0 ports
- 1 x USB 2.0 Type-C port for power & data
- M.2 Key E slot (PCIe 2.0 and USB 2.0 support
- 40-pin Raspberry Pi-compatible GPIO header
The Banana Pi BPI-M4 will also be available with up to 2GB of RAM and 64GB of eMMC storage, but since those items are soldered to the board, you’ll probably want to buy a model pre-configured with those options since upgrading would be difficult, if not impossible.
The system is slightly larger than a 85mm x 56mm Raspberry Pi measuring 92mm x 60mm (3.6″ x 2.4″).
One other difference to keep in mind is that while the Banana Pi looks pretty competitive on a hardware front, a key selling point for Raspberry Pi devices at this point is the extensive software, hardware, and support ecosystem that’s built up around the product lineup since the first Raspberry Pi device was launched in 2012. So far no other single-board computer/dev board has been able to match that.
via CNX-Software
Nice downgrade from the banana pi m2u
10/100 NIC come on!!! Where is the 1GB NIC on these little boards. 4k content isnt going to do well over a 10/100 connection
Just saw that. Unless you use local storage then via USB, it is a real deal breaker especially if it is unprocessed 4K content direct from the ISO.
Update: There is hope! You could add a Wireless AC card via the M.2 Key E slot. You can easily source an Intel® Wireless-AC 9260 for just short of $20 on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/Intel-Wireless-Ac-9260-2230-Gigabit/dp/B079QJQF4Y
Since it is fortunately a PCIe 2.0 1x slot, you will be far from being bus limited (PCIe 2.0 x1 interface limits read/write speed to 500MB/s). I hope this helps someone!
Awesome find, Brad! It looks like its CPU, the RTD1395, supports 4K decoding across all major codecs, too:
“H.265 4K 60fps, VP9 4K 60fps, H.264 4K 30fps decoder”
Source:
https://www.realtek.com/en/products/communications-network-ics/item/rtd1395