
Messages sorted by: Īdd a new style driver for the clock control unit in Allwinner A31/A31s. Next in thread: Jean-Francois Moine: "Re: clk: sunxi-ng: Add A31/A31s clocks". In reply to: Maxime Ripard: "Re: clk: sunxi-ng: nkm: Add mux to support multiple parents". Previous message: Chen-Yu Tsai: " clk: sunxi-ng: nkm: Add mux to support multiple parents". Next message: Chen-Yu Tsai: " clk: sunxi-ng: mux: support fixed pre-dividers on multiple parents". Video is via the SGX544MP2, and while that’s not a cutting-edge solution these days, it’s a much stronger product than what we’d have expected in these devices before.Linux-Kernel Archive: clk: sunxi-ng: Add A31/A31s clocks clk: sunxi-ng: Add A31/A31s clocks From: Chen-Yu Tsai The Onda, at $145, is a quad-core Cortex-A7 design with 16GB of NAND, 1GB of RAM, a 1200×800 display (up from 840×480), an 8-inch screen, and a 3G modem. Even then, “unimpressive” was an understatement. The system used a resistive touchscreen, a 533MHz ARM9 core, 256MB of RAM, and 2GB of NAND flash. When I tested the Walgreen’s Maylong tablet in December 2010, I was anything but impressed. Less fanciful is the fact that the ultra-cheap Android tablet market is growing up fast. Anyone arguing that these products are going to make a near-term chomp into Samsung, Qualcomm, Nvidia, or Intel is indulging in flights of fancy. That’s half of what Nvidia has reportedly charged for Tegra 3, and substantially less than Intel.ĭevices like the upcoming Onda tablet might look like iPads, but they aren’t.
Equally as interesting to consumers and investors alike is that the company reportedly sells its SoCs for as little as $8-$10 each.
In late March, the company announced its A31s SoCs, which are designed for so-called “phablets” - phones that range from five to seven inches. Allwinner’s latest A31 processors are still based on 40nm technology, but the quad-core Cortex-A7 designs should help limit total power consumption.