Rockchip

Coordinates: 26°06′46″N 119°15′54″E / 26.112846°N 119.264960°E / 26.112846; 119.264960
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

26°06′46″N 119°15′54″E / 26.112846°N 119.264960°E / 26.112846; 119.264960

Fuzhou Rockchip Electronics Co., Ltd.
Native name
瑞芯微电子股份有限公司
Company typePublic
SSE: 603893
Industry
FoundedFuzhou
2001; 23 years ago (2001)
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide, but primarily China
Key people
  • Min Li (CEO)
  • Feng Chen (Vice President)
ProductsSemiconductors, SoC (System-on-chip)
Number of employees
700+ (2017)
Websitewww.rock-chips.com
Footnotes / references
[1][2][3]

Rockchip (Fuzhou Rockchip Electronics Co., Ltd.) is a Chinese fabless semiconductor company based in Fuzhou, Fujian province. Rockchip has been providing SoC products for tablets & PCs, streaming media TV boxes, AI audio & vision, IoT hardware since founded in 2001. It has offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Hangzhou and Hong Kong.[4] It designs system on a chip (SoC) products, using the ARM architecture licensed from ARM Holdings for the majority of its projects.[5]

Rockchip was one of the top 50 fabless C suppliers in 2018.[6] The company established cooperation with Google,[7] Microsoft[8] and Intel. On 27 May 2014, Intel announced an agreement with Rockchip to adopt the Intel architecture for entry-level tablets.[3]

Rockchip is a supplier of SoCs to Chinese white-box tablet manufacturers[9][10][11] as well as supplying OEMs such as Asus,[12][13] HP,[14] Samsung[15] and Toshiba.[16][17]

Products[edit]

Tronsmart MK908, a Rockchip-based quad-core Android "mini PC", with a microSD card next to it for a size comparison.

Featured Products[edit]

The RK3588 is the flagship SoC of Rockchip. It has a smaller version, named RK3588S.

RK3399

The RK3399 is the former flagship of Rockchip, and the predecessor of the RK3588.

Dual Cortex-A72 and Quad Cortex-A53 and Mali-T860MP4 GPU, provide computing and multi-media performance, interfaces and peripherals. And software supports multiple APIs: OpenGL ES 3.2, Vulkan 1.0, OpenCL 1.1/1.2, OpenVX 1.0, AI interfaces support TensorFlow Lite/AndroidNN API.[18]

RK3399 Linux source code and hardware documents are on GitHub[19] and Wiki opensource website.[20]

RK3399 CPU GPU Memory Video

Decoder

Video Encoder Display Interface ISP Camera Sensor Interface USB Digital Audio Interface
Dual Cortex-A72 + Quad Cortex-A53, 64-bit CPU Mali-T860 GPU Dual channel DDR3-1866/ DDR3L-1866/LPDDR3-1866/LPDDR4, eMMC 5.1 Up to 4KP60 H.265/H.264/VP9 Up to 1080P30 H.264 HDMI2.0, 2 x MIPI DSI, eDP 13M Dual channel MIPI CSI-2 receive interface Dual USB 3.0 with type-C supported I²S/PCM(2ch)
2× I²S(8ch), S/PDIF
RK3566

RK3566 is a successor to the RK3288 and outperforms it significantly, with quad core Arm A55 CPUs and an Arm Mali G52 GPU. Boards based on it are expected to be on sale in early 2021 from manufacturers like Pine64, Boardcon.

RK3566 CPU GPU External Memory Interface Video Decoder Video Encoder Display Interface ISP Camera Sensor Interface USB Digital Audio Interface
Quad-core ARM Cortex-A55, Neon and FPU, 22 nm process, up to 2.0 GHz Mali-G52 DDR4/DDR3L/LP4/LP4x/LP3 4KP60 H.264/H.265/VP9 1080P60 H.264, H.265 LVDS/MIPI DSI, HDMI 2.0, eDp, Eink 8M with HDR MIPI-CSI2, 1x4-lane/2×2-lane USB 2.0 HOST, USB2.0 OTG
1× USB 3.0 HOST
8ch PDM

SPDIF OUT

RK3288 is a high performance IoT platform, Quad-core Cortex-A17 CPU and Mali-T760MP4 GPU, 4K video decoding and 4K display out. It is applied to products of various industries including Vending Machine, Commercial Display, Medical Equipment, Gaming, Intelligent POS, Interactive Printer, Robot and Industrial Computer.[21]

RK3288 Linux source code and hardware documents are on GitHub[19] and Wiki opensource website.[20]

RK3288 CPU GPU External Memory Interface Video Decoder Video Encoder Display Interface ISP Camera Sensor Interface USB Digital Audio Interface
Quad-Core Cortex-A17 Mali-T760MP4 GPU Dual-channel DDR3/DDR3L/LPDDR2/LPDDR3,

SLC/MLC/TLC Nand Flash, eMMC4.5

Up to 4KP60 H.265/H.264/VP9 Up to 1080P30 H.264 HDMI2.0, 2× MIPI DSI, LVDS, eDP, Parallel RGB 13M Parallel CIF, MIPI CSI-2 1× USB 2.0 OTG,
2× USB 2.0 HOST
1× I2S(8ch),

S/PDIF

PX30

RK3326 and PX30 were announced in 2018, marketed for AI.[22] PX30 is a variant of RK3326 targeting IoT market, supporting dual VOP. They use Arm's CPU Cortex-A35 and GPU G31.

Feature CPU GPU External Memory Interface Video Decoder Video Encoder Display Interface ISP Camera Sensor

Interface

USB Digital Audio Interface
PX30 Quad-Core Cortex-A35 Mali-G31 GPU 32Bit DDR4-1600/DDR3/L-1600/

LPDDR3-1600/LPDDR2-1066,
MLC NAND, Nor FLASH, eMMC 4.5

1080P60 H.264/H.265 1080P30 H.264 MIPI DSI, Parallel RGB, LVDS,

*Support dual VOP

8M MIPI CSI and

DVP Sensor interface

USB2.0 HOST&OTG 2× I2S/PCM(2ch)
1× I2S/TDM(8ch)
1× PDM(8ch)
RK3326 Quad-Core Cortex-A35 Mali-G31 GPU 32Bit DDR4-1600/DDR3/L-1600/

LPDDR3-1600/LPDDR2-1066,

MLC NAND, Nor FLASH, eMMC 4.5

1080P60 H.264/H.265 1080P30 H.264 MIPI DSI, Parallel RGB, LVDS 8M MIPI CSI and

DVP Sensor interface

USB2.0 OTG 2× I2S/PCM(2ch)
1× I2S/TDM(8ch)
1 x PDM(8ch)

RK3308 is an entry-level product line for mainstream devices. The chip has multiple audio input interfaces, and greater energy efficiency,[23] featuring embedded voice activation detection).

RK3308 CPU Audio Memory Connectivity
Quad-Core Cortex-A35 Embedded Audio CODEC with 8xADC,2xDAC 16bits DDR3-1066/DDR3L-1066/DDR2-1066/LPDDR2-1066 Support SLC NAND, eMMC 4.51, Serial Nor FLASH Support 2x8ch I2S/TDM, 1x8ch PDM, 1x2ch I2S/PCM Support SPDIF IN/OUT, HDMI ARC SDIO3.0, USB2.0 OTG, USB2.0 HOST, I2C, UART, SPI, I2S

The announcement of RV1108 indicated Rockchip's move to AI/computer vision territory.

With CEVA DSP embedded, RV1108 powers smart cameras including 360° Video Camera,[24] IPC, Drone, Car Camcoder, Sport DV, VR, etc.[25] It also has been deployed for new retail and intelligent marketing applications with integrated algorithms.[26]

RV1108 CPU DSP External Memory Interface Video Decoder Video Encoder Display Interface ISP Camera Sensor Interface USB Digital Audio Interface
Cortex-A7 CEVA XM4 DSP 16Bit DDR3/DDR3L,

SPI NOR FLASH, SLC NAND, eMMC

1440P30 H.264 1440P30 H.264 HDMI1.4, MIPI DSI,

Parallel RGB, CVBS OUT

8M with WDR MIPI CSI-2, CVBS IN 1 x USB 2.0 OTG

1 x USB 2.0 HOST

2 x I2S/PCM(2ch)

1 x I2S(8ch)

Early Products[edit]

RK26xx series - Released 2006.

RK27xx series - Rockchip was first known for their RK27xx series that was very efficient at MP3/MP4 decoding and was integrated in many low-cost personal media player (PMP) products.

RK28xx series

The RK2806 was targeted at PMPs.

The RK2808A is an ARM926EJ-S derivative. Along with the ARM core a DSP coprocessor is included. The native clock speed is 560 MHz. ARM rates the performance of the ARM926EJ-S at 1.1 DMIPS/MHz the performance of the Rockchip 2808 when executing ARM instructions is therefore 660 DMIPS roughly 26% the speed of Apple's A4 processor. The DSP coprocessor can support the real-time decoding of 720p video files at bitrates of up to 2.5 Mbit/s. This chip was the core of many Android and Windows Mobile-based mobile internet devices.[citation needed]

The RK2816 was targeted at PMP devices, and MIDs. It has the same specifications as the RK2806 but also includes HDMI output, Android support, and up to 720p hardware video acceleration.

RK29xx series

The Rockchip RK291x is a family of SoCs based on the ARM Cortex-A8 CPU core. They were presented for the first time at CES 2011. The RK292x are single core SoCs based on ARM Cortex-A9 and were first introduced in 2012.

The RK2918[27] was the first chip to decode Google WebM VP8 in hardware. It uses a dynamically configurable companion core to process various codecs. It encodes and decodes H.264 at 1080p, and can decode many standard video formats including Xvid, H.263, AVS, MPEG4, RV, and WMV. It includes a Vivante GC800 GPU that is compatible with OpenGL ES 2.0 and OpenVG. The RK2918 is compatible with Android Froyo (2.2), Gingerbread (2.3), HoneyComb (3.x) and Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0).[28] Unofficial support for Ubuntu and other Linux flavours exists. As of 2013, it was targeted at E-readers.[29]

The RK2906 is basically a cost-reduced version of the RK2918, also targeted at E-readers as of 2013.[29]

The Rockchip RK2926 and RK2928[30] feature a single core ARM Cortex A9 running at a speed up to 1.0 GHz. It replaces the Vivante GC800 GPU of the older RK291x series with an ARM Mali-400 GPU. As of 2013, the RK2926 was targeted at tablets, while the RK2928 was targeted at tablets and Android TV dongles and boxes.[29]

The RK3066 is a high performance dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 mobile processor similar to the Samsung Exynos 4 Dual Core chip. In terms of performance, the RK3066 is between the Samsung Exynos 4210 and the Samsung Exynos 4212.[31][32][33][34][35] As of 2013, it was targeted at tablets and Android TV dongles and boxes.[29] It has been a popular choice for both tablets and other devices since 2012.

The RK3068 is a version of the RK3066 specifically targeted at Android TV dongles and boxes. Its package is much smaller than the RK3066.[29]

The RK3028 is a low-cost dual-core ARM Cortex-A9-based processor clocked at 1.0 GHz with ARM Mali-400 GPU. It is pin-compatible with the RK2928. It is used in a few kids tablets and low-cost Android HDMI TV dongles.[36]

The RK3026 is an updated ultra-low-end dual-core ARM Cortex-A9-based tablet processor clocked at 1.0 GHz with ARM Mali-400 MP2 GPU. Manufactured at 40 nm, it is pin-compatible with the RK2926. It features 1080p H.264 video encoding and 1080p decoding in multiple formats.[37] Supporting Android 4.4,[38] it has been adopted for low-end tablets in 2014.

The RK3036 is a low-cost dual-core ARM Cortex-A7-based processor released in Q4 2014 for smart set-top boxes with support for H.265 video decoding.[39]

RK31xx series[edit]

RK3188

The RK3188 was the first product in the RK31xx series, announced for production in the 2nd quarter of 2013. The RK3188 features a quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 clocked up to 1.6 GHz frequency.[40][41] It is targeted at tablets and Android TV dongles and boxes,[29] and has been a popular choice for both tablets and other devices requiring good performance.

The RK3188T is a lower-clocked version of the RK3188, with the CPU cores running at a maximum speed of 1.4 GHz instead of 1.6 GHz. The Mali-400MP4 GPU is also clocked at a lower speed. As of early 2014, many devices advertised as using a RK3188 with a maximum clock speed of 1.6 GHz actually have a RK3188T with clock speed limited to 1.4 GHz. Operating system ROMs specifically made for the RK3188 may not work correctly with a RK3188T.

The RK3168, first shown in April 2013, is a dual-core Cortex A9-based CPU, also manufactured using the 28 nm process.[44][45] It is targeted at low-end tablets.[29] The chip has seen only limited use as of May 2014.

The RK3126 is an entry-level tablet processor introduced in Q4 2014. Manufactured using a 40 nm process, it features a quad-core Cortex-A7 CPU up to 1.3 GHz and a Mali-400 MP2 GPU. It is pin-compatible with RK3026 and RK2926.[46]

  • 40 nm process
  • Quad-core ARM Cortex-A7, up to 1.3 GHz
  • Mali-400 MP2 GPU
  • High performance dedicated 2D processor
  • DDR3, DDR3L memory interface
  • 1080p multi-format video decoding and 1080p video encoding for H.264

The RK3128 is a higher-end variant of RK3126, also to be introduced in Q4 2014, that features more integrated external interfaces, including CVBS, HDMI, Ethernet MAC, S/PDIF, Audio DAC, and USB. It targets more fully featured tablets and set-top boxes.[47]

RK32xx series[edit]

An RK3288 installed on an Asus Tinker Board.

Rockchip has announced the RK3288 for production in the second quarter of 2014.[48] Recent information suggests that the chip uses a quad-core ARM Cortex-A17 CPU, although technically ARM Cortex-A12,[49] which as of October 1, 2014, ARM has decided to also refer to as Cortex-A17 because the latest production version of Cortex-A12 performs at a similar performance level as Cortex-A17.[50]

  • 28 nm HKMG process.
  • Quad-core ARM Cortex-A17, up to 1.8 GHz
  • Quad-core ARM Mali-T760 MP4 (also incorrectly called Mali-T764) GPU clocked at 600 MHz[43] supporting OpenGL ES 1.1/2.0/3.0/3.1, OpenCL 1.1, Renderscript, Direct3D 11.1[51]
  • High performance dedicated 2D processor
  • 1080P video encoding for H.264 and VP8, MVC
  • 4K H.264 and 10 bits H.265 video decode, 1080p multi-video decode
  • Supports 4Kx2K H.265 resolution
  • Dual-channel DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR2, LPDDR3
  • Up to 3840x2160 display output, HDMI 2.0

RK3288 controversy[edit]

Early reports including Rockchip first suggested in summer 2013 that the RK3288 was originally designed using a quad-core ARM Cortex-A12 configuration. Rockchip's primary foundry partner GlobalFoundries announced a partnership with ARM to optimize the ARM Cortex-A12 for their 28 nm-SLP process.[52] This is the same process used for earlier Rockchip chips such as the RK3188, and matches the choice of Cortex-A12 cores in the design of the RK3288.

In January 2014, official marketing materials listed the CPU cores as ARM Cortex-A17. At the CES electronics show in January 2014, someone apparently corrected the CPU specification as being ARM Cortex-A12 instead of Cortex-A17 on one of the panels of their show booth.[53] However, since then, official specifications from Rockchip's website and marketing materials as well specifications used by device manufacturers have continued to describe the CPU as a quad-core ARM Cortex-A17.

Recent testing of early RK3288-based TV boxes (August/September 2014) provided evidence that the RK3288 technically contains Cortex-A12 cores, since the "ARM 0xc0d" CPU architecture reported by CPU-Z for Android is the reference for Cortex-A12, while the original Cortex-A17 is referred to as "ARM 0xc0e".[49]

However, on the ARM community website, ARM clarified the situation on October 1, 2014, saying that Cortex-A12, for which Rockchip is one of the few known customers, will be called Cortex-A17 from now on, and that all references to Cortex-A12 have been removed from ARM's website.[50] ARM explained that the latest production revision of Cortex-A12 now performs close to the level of Cortex-A17 because the improvements of the Cortex-A17 now also have been applied to the latest version of Cortex-A12. In this way, Rockchip now gets the official blessing from ARM for listing the cores inside the RK3288 as Cortex-A17.

The first Android TV stick based on RK3288 was launched in November 2014 ("ZERO Devices Z5C Thinko").

RK33xx series[edit]

Rockchip announced RK3368, the first member of the RK33xx family, at the CES show in January 2015. The RK3368 is a SoC targeting tablets and media boxes featuring a 64-bit octa-core Cortex-A53 CPU and an OpenGL ES 3.1-class GPU.[54]

  • 64bits Octa-Core Cortex-A53, up to 1.5 GHz
  • High-performance PowerVR SGX6110 GPU with support for OpenGL 3.1 and OpenGL ES 3.0
  • 4Kx2K H.264/H.265 real-time video playback
  • HDMI 2.0 with 4Kx2K @ 60 fps display output

The RK3399, also known as OP1[15] announced by ARM at Mobile World Congress in February 2016, features six 64 bit CPUs, including 2 Cortex-A72 and 4 Cortex-A53.[55] The RK3399 is used for the development of the open source Panfrost driver for ARM Mali GPU Midgard series.[56][57]

Consumer devices include Asus Chromebook Flip C101PA-DB02, Asus Chromebook Tablet CT100, Samsung Chromebook Plus, and Pine64 Pinebook Pro.

SBCs include 96Boards RK1808, Boardcon EM3399, Firefly RK3399, Khadas Edge, Lenovo Leez LP710, NanoPi M4B, Rock Pi 4, Pine64 RockPro64, Orange Pi 4, and Zidoo M9.

SOMs include BeiQi RK3399Pro AIoT (Compatible 96boards), Boardcon PICO3399 SO-DIMM, and Geniatech SOM3399 RK3399 (Compatible 96boards).

The RK3399Pro is a version of the RK3399 that includes a 2.4 TOPS NPU.[58]

SBCs include Rock Pi N10, Toybrick RK3399Pro, and VMARC RK3399Pro SoM Ficus2 Evaluation Board. SOM example is VMARC RK3399Pro SoM.

RK35xx series[edit]

The RK3566 is expected to be available in Q2 2020, with the following specifications:[59]

  • CPU – Quad-core Arm Cortex-A55 @ 1.8 GHz
  • GPU – Arm Mali-G52 2EE
  • NPU – 1 TOPS with support for INT8/ INT16
  • Multi-Media
    • 8M ISP 2.0 with 3F HDR (Line-based/Frame-based/DCG)
    • Support MIPI-CSI2,4-lane
    • 1080p60 H.265, H.264 encoding
    • 4K H.264/H.265/VP9 60fps video decoder
    • DVP interface with BT.656/BT.1120
  • Memory – 32-bit DDR3L/LPDDR3/DDR4/LPDDR4/LPDDR4X
  • Storage – eMMC 4.51, NAND Flash, SFC NOR flash, SATA 3.0, SD card via SDIO
  • Display
    • Support Dual Display
    • MIPI-DSI/RGB interface
    • LVDS/eDP/DP
    • HDMI 2.0
  • Audio – 2x 8-ch I2S, 2x 2-ch I2S, PDM, TDM, SPDIF
  • Networking – 2x RGMII interfaces (Gigabit Ethernet) with TSO (TCP segmentation offload ) network acceleration
  • USB – USB 2.0 OTG and USB 2.0 host; USB3.0 HOST
  • Other peripherals
    • PCIe
    • 3x SDIO 3.0 interface for Wi-Fi and SD card
    • 6x I2C, 10x UART, 4x SPI, 8x PWM, 2xCAN interface

RK3566-based SBC example are Pine64 Quartz64,[60] Boardcon EM3566 SBC,[61] Compact3566.[62] and SoM example are Boardcon CM3566,[63] PICO3566.[64]

RK3568-based SBC example are Firefly Station P2, Boardcon EM3568, and SOM example are Core-3568J AI Core Board, CM3568 SOM.[65]

The RK3588 succeeds the RK3399Pro as flagship SoC. It's expected to be available in Q3/Q4 2020.[59]

  • CPU – 4x Cortex-A76 and 4x Cortex-A55 cores in dynamIQ configuration
  • GPU – ARM Mali-G610 MP4 GPU
  • NPU (Neural Processing Unit) - 6 TOPS
  • Multimedia – 8K video decoding support, 4K encoding support
  • Display – 4K video output, dual-display support
  • Process – 8 nm LP

RK3588-based SBC example is Boardcon Idea3588,[66] and SOM example is CM3588 SOM.[67]

Open-source commitment[edit]

Rockchip provides open source software on GitHub[19] and maintains a wiki Linux SDK website[20] to offer free downloads of SoC hardware documents and software development resources as well as third-party development kits info. The chipsets available are RK3399, RK3288, RK3328 and RK3036.

Markets and competition[edit]

In the market for SoCs for tablets, Rockchip faces competition with Allwinner Technology,[68] MediaTek,[10] Intel,[69] Actions Semiconductor,[70] Spreadtrum,[71] Leadcore Technology,[72] Samsung Semiconductor, Qualcomm, Broadcom, VIA Technologies[68] and Amlogic.[68]

After establishing a position early in the developing Chinese tablet SoC market, in 2012 it faced a challenge by Allwinner.[2] In 2012, Rockchip shipped 10.5 million tablet processors, compared to 27.5 million for Allwinner.[68] However, for Q3 2013, Rockchip was forecast to ship 6 million tablet-use application processors in China, compared to 7 million for Allwinner who mainly shipped single-core products.[73] Rockchip was reported to be the number one supplier of tablet-use application processors in China in Q4 2013, Q1 2014 and Q2 2014.[9][11]

Chinese SoC suppliers that do not have cellular baseband technology are at a disadvantage compared to companies such as MediaTek that also supply the smartphone market as white-box tablet makers increasingly add phone or cellular data functionality to their products.[74]

Intel Corporation made investments into the tablet processor market, and was heavily subsidizing its entry into the low-cost tablet market as of 2014.[69]

Cooperation with Intel[edit]

In May 2014, Intel announced an agreement with Rockchip to jointly deliver an Intel-branded mobile SoC platform based on Intel's Atom processor and 3G modem technology.[3] Under the terms of the agreement, the two companies will deliver an Intel-branded mobile SoC platform. The quad-core platform will be based on an Intel Atom processor core integrated with Intel's 3G modem technology, and is expected to be available in the first half of 2015.[3] Both Intel and Rockchip will sell the new part to OEMs and ODMs, primarily into each company's existing customer base.[3]

As of October 2014, Rockchip was already offering Intel's XMM 6321, for low-end smartphones.[75] It has two chips: a dual-core application processor (either with Intel processor cores or ARM Cortex-A5 cores) with integrated modem (XG632) and an integrated RF chip (AG620) that originates from the cellular chip division of Infineon Technologies (which Intel acquired some time ago). The application processor may also originate from Infineon or Intel.

List of Rockchip SoCs[edit]

ARMv7-A processors[edit]

Model Number Fab CPU GPU Memory Technology Sampl. Avail-
ability
Utilizing Devices
ISA μarch Cores Freq. (GHz) L2 cache (KB) μarch Freq. (MHz) GFlops Type Bus width BW (GB/s)
RK2918[27] 55 nm ARMv7-A ARM Cortex-A8 1 1 – 1.2 512 Vivante GC800 575[43] 4.6[43] DDR, DDR2, DDR3 ? ? 2011
List
  • Cube U9GT2, CUBE U15GT, Teclast A15, Wopad i8, Orange TB9900, list of Jelly Bean upgradeable RK2918 tablets[76] Videocon VT71, Innovel I703W, Odys Neo X7 / X8, Huawei MediaPad 7 Lite
RK2926[29] ARM Cortex-A9 1.0 128 Mali-400 MP 400[43] 3.6[43] ? 32-bit ? ?
List
  • Avoca 7" Tablet STB7012[77]
RK2928[29][30] ? DDR3, DDR3L ? 2012
List
  • Cube U25GT, Double Power(Dopo) M-975, Touchmate TM-MID720, Denver TAC-70072
RK3066[29][45] 40 nm 2 1.6 512 Mali-400 MP4 266[43] 9.6[43] LPDDR-400, LPDDR2-800, DDR3-800, LVDDR3-800, up to 2 GiB[78] 3.2 2012
List
  • Boardcon MINI3066,[79] Monster M7 tablet, HP Slate 7,[14] Inar إينار, i.onik TP 10.1-1500DC-KB, Colorovo CityTab Vision 10.1", Teclast P76e Dual-core, Teclast P76t, Teclast P98, Teclast P85, Window (YuanDao) N70S, Window (YuanDao) N101 I, Cube U9GT3, Cube U9GT4, Cube U21GT, PIPO S2, Cube U30GT, Cube U9GT V, Cube U18GT Elite Dual Core, BlueBerry NetCat M-12, CHUWI V8 Dual-core, CHUWI V99, Aoson M11, Pipo S1, Ployer Momo7 IPS, Ployer Momo8, Ployer Momo11, Ployer Momo12, FNF ifive X, FNF ifive mini, Prestigio 7.0 Pro Duo (5570C), Probox2 Ultimate, Minix Neo G4, Minix Neo X5, Minix Neo X5 mini, Minix Neo X3,[80] ICOO D70PROII, Ampe A78, Imito MX1, Imito MX2, Rikomagic MK802 III, Rikomagic MK802 IIIs, Tronsmart MK808, Tronsmart MK808B, JMI Tab T970, Joyplus DR-7, Cozyswan MK809, Cozyswan MK809 II, Ugoos UG802, Ugoos UG802II, Ugoos UG007, Ugoos UG008,[81] Measy U2A,[82] Measy U2C,[83] iball Slide i9702, Kilwa V73, Tomato V8,[84] Innovel I801B, DNS AirTab M76r, Danew Dslide972, Noblex NB8012, (Nexoc) Captiva Pad 10.1, Hisense Sero 7 LT,[85] teXet TM-7047HD, teXet TM-9747, teXet TM-9747BT, teXet TM-9748
RK3026 1.0 ? Mali-400 MP2 500[43] 9.0[43] DDR3, DDR3L ? Q3 2013
List
  • Blow WhiteTAB 7.2 Multimedia tablet, Odys Bravio
RK3036[39] ARM Cortex-A7 1.0 ? Mali-400 MP 500[43] 9.0[43] DDR3-1066, DDR3L-1066 16-bit ? Q4 2014
RK3126[46] 4 1.2 256 Mali-400 MP2 600[43] 10.8[43] ? Q4 2014
RK3128[47] DDR3-1066, DDR3L-1066, LPDDR2-1066 32-bit ? Q4 2014
List
  • Boardcon Compact3128 [86]
RK3168[29][45] 28 nm

HKMG

ARM Cortex-A9 2 1.2 PowerVR SGX540 600[43] 9.6[43] ? 2013
List
  • RCA RCT6378W2,[87] Toshiba Excite 7c[17]Jazz UltraTab C855
RK3188[29][41] 4 1.6 512 Mali-400 MP4 533[43] 19.2[43] Up to 800 MHz LPDDR2, DDR3/3L, up to 2 GiB 6.4 2013
List
  • Boardcon EM3188 SBC,[88] Asus MemoPad 8,[12] Asus MemoPad 10,[13] Toshiba Excite 7, Minix Neo X7/Neo X7 mini,[89] GoTab GTQ97,[90] Cube Pea II,[91] Cube U30GT2, CloudnetGo CR9, iMito QX1,[92] PIPO M8pro,[93] PIPO M9, PIPO M7 PRO, Rikomagic MK802 IV, Ugoos UG802B, Ugoos UG007B, Ugoos MK809 III,[94] Ugoos QC802,[95] Measy U4B, Tronsmart MK908, Tronsmart T428, Measy U4B, Freelander PD800, FNF iFive x2[96] Vido Mini One, JXD S7800b,[97] Tesco Hudl,[98] SteelCore10III, teXet TM-9750HD, teXet TM-9757, teXet TM-9758, teXet TM-9767, teXet TM-9768H, Radxa Rock,[99] Loosen RAM use Greenify,[100] GoClever ORION 100,[101] Medion LifeTab S7852,[102]
RK3188T 1.4 +-400 14.4 ? 2013
RK3229 ARM Cortex-A7 1.5 256 Mali-400 MP2 600 10.8[43] LPDDR2/3, DDR3/3L, up to 2 GiB
RK3288[48] ARM Cortex-A17 1.8 1024[103] Mali-T760 MP4 (listed as Mali-T764) 600[43] 81.6[43] DDR3/3L-1333, LPDDR2/3-1066, up to 4 GiB 32-bit dual channel ? Q3 2014
List
  • Boardcon EM3288 SBC,[104] Pipo P1,[105] Pipo P8,[106] Teclast P90HD,[107] Tronsmart Orion R28,[108] FNF iFive Mini 4[109] Insignia - Flex Elite 7.85",[110] Asus Chromebook C201, Chromebit CS10 and Chromebook Flip C100P, Lenovo MiniStation, Asus Tinkerboard

ARMv8-A processors[edit]

Model Number Fab CPU GPU Memory Technology Sampl. Avail-
ability
Utilizing Devices
ISA μarch Cores Freq. (GHz) L2 cache (KB) μarch Freq. (MHz) GFlops Type Bus width BW (GB/s)
RK1808 ? ARMv8-A ARM Cortex-A35 2 1.6 ? - - - 2MB SRAM
LPDDR2, DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3, DDR4
32-bit ? ? ?
RK3308 ? 4 1.3 ? - - - LPDDR2, DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3 16-bit ? ? ?
RK3326
PX30
40 nm 1.5 ? Mali-G31MP2 ? ? LPDDR2, DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3, DDR4 32-bit ? 2018 ?
RK3328 28 nm

HKMG

ARM Cortex-A53 256 Mali-450 MP2 ? ? DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3, DDR4 32-bit ? Q1 2017
List
RK3368[54][113]
PX5
2 × ARM Cortex-A53 (big.LITTLE)[114] 4+4[114] 512 (Big cluster),
256 (Little cluster)[114]
PowerVR G6110 600[43] 38.4[43] LPDDR2, DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3 32-bit ? Q1 2015
List
RK3399[117]
RK3399Pro
PX6
ARM Cortex-A72 & ARM Cortex-A53

(big.LITTLE with GTS)

2+4 2.0 (A72)

1.5 (A53)

1MB (Big cluster),

512KB (Little cluster)

Mali-T860 MP4 600[43] 81.6[43] LPDDR2, DDR3, DDR3L, LPDDR3, LPDDR4 2 channels,

each 16-bit or 32-bit,

up to 4GB

? Q2 2016[118]
List
  • iFive 2-in-1, Techvision 2-in-1, FenMi TV box,[119] Boardcon EM3399 SBC,[120] Ugoos UT5 TV box, Samsung Chromebook Plus OP1,[121] PiPo V5 Android VR Headset[122]

Tablet processors with integrated modem[edit]

Model number Fab CPU GPU Memory technology Integrated wireless technology Sampl. avail-ability Utilizing devices
ISA μarch Cores Freq. (GHz) L2 cache (KB) μarch Freq. (MHz) GFlops Type Bus width BW (GB/s)
x3-C3130[123][124] 28 nm x86-64[3] Intel Atom SoFIA 3G[3] 2[3] 1.0 512 Mali-400MP2 480 8.64 1x32bit LPDDR2 800, up to 1GB 32-bit 3.2 HSPA+ 21/5.8, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.0 LE, GPS, GLONASS, FM[3] Q1'15
x3-C3200RK[123][125] Intel Atom SoFIA 3G-R 4[3] 1.1 1024 Mali-450MP4 600 35.8 1x32bit LPDDR2/3 1066, 2x16bit DDR3L 1333, up to 2GB 4.2 Wi-Fi[3]
x3-C3205RK[126] 1.2 Q4'16
x3-C3230RK[127] 1.1 HSPA+ 21/5.8, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.0 LE, GPS, GLONASS, FM[3] Q'15
x3-C3235RK[128] 1.2 HSPA+ 21/5.8, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.0 LE, GPS, GLONASS, FM[3] Q4'15
x3-C3265RK[129] 1.1 HSPA+ 21/5.8, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.0 LE, GPS, GLONASS, FM[3] Q4'16
x3-C3295RK[130] HSPA+ 21/5.8, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.0 LE, GPS, GLONASS, FM[3]
x3-C3440[131][132] Intel Atom SoFIA LTE 1.4 Mali-T720MP2 20.4 1x LPDDR2/3 1066, 2x16bit DDR3/DDR3L 1066 LTE FDD/TDD up to Cat 6, DC-HSPA+ 42/11, TD-SCDMA, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.1 LE, GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, FM, NFC[3] Q1'15
x3-C3405[133] 456 15.5 1x LPDDR2/3 1066 Wi-Fi[3]
x3-C3445[134] LTE FDD/TDD up to Cat 6, DC-HSPA+ 42/11, TD-SCDMA, GSM/GPRS/EDGE, DSDS, Wi-Fi, BT 4.1 LE, GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, FM, NFC[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Company Brief". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  2. ^ a b "China Fabless: Rockchip rattled by Android tablet wars". 2012-09-25. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Intel Enters into Strategic Agreement with Rockchip to Accelerate, Expand Portfolio of Intel-Based Solutions for Tablets". Intel. 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  4. ^ "Rockchip Website".
  5. ^ "Rockchip Multimedia Processor RK28 series by Fuzhou Rockchip Electronics CO., Ltd". ARM. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
  6. ^ "Fabless Take 27% Of IC Market". Electronics Weekly. 2018-03-22. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  7. ^ "Fully Supports Google Assistant! Rockchip RK3229 Solution Released at Google I/O Conference". www.prnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  8. ^ dengfeicui_gz, baishun_gz (2007-08-15). "Rockchip Announces Strategic Cooperation with Microsoft-太平洋电脑网". Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  9. ^ a b "Digitimes Research: Tablet application processor shipments in China slip 2.7% in 1Q14". DigiTimes. 2014-04-01. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  10. ^ a b "Mediatek to Benefit from Budget Device Market in 2014, Research Shows". TechNews. 2014-04-28. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
  11. ^ a b "Digitimes Research: China sees increased tablet AP shipments in 2Q14". DigiTimes. 2014-07-28. Retrieved 2014-07-28.
  12. ^ a b "Review: Asus MeMo Pad 8, The Flourishless Slate". DigitalVersus. 2014-04-17. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  13. ^ a b "Asus MeMO Pad 10 ME102A 16GB Detailed Specs". PDAdb.net. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  14. ^ a b "HP Slate 7 - Specifications". DeviceSpecifications. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  15. ^ a b "Solving the mystery behind the OP1 processor in the Chromebook Plus". 22 February 2017. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  16. ^ "Toshiba Excite 7 specs". PhoneArena. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  17. ^ a b "Toshiba Excite 7c Tablet (8GB)". HWzone. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  18. ^ "Edge Specs | Rockchip RK3399 Datasheet | Linux Development Board". Amazing Khadas, Always Amazes You!. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
  19. ^ a b c "rockchip-linux". GitHub. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  20. ^ a b c "Linux SDK - Rockchip open source Document". opensource.rock-chips.com. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  21. ^ ThinkCMF. "Firefly | Make technology more simple , Make life more intellingent". en.t-firefly.com. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  22. ^ "Rockchip RK3308 & RK3326 Datasheets Released". CNXSoft - Embedded Systems News. 2018-07-23. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  23. ^ "Rockchip launches new IoT and AI focused chips - IoT Gadgets". IoT Gadgets. 2018-03-16. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  24. ^ "CEVA Computer Vision DSP Powers Evomotion ROD-1 360° Video Camera - CEVA". CEVA. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  25. ^ "Rockchip VR Camera Solution released in CES 2017 - China Gadgets Reviews". China Gadgets Reviews. 2017-01-08. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  26. ^ "Rockchip-瑞芯微电子股份有限公司". www.rock-chips.com. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  27. ^ a b "RK2918". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  28. ^ "Rockchip presents RK2818 and RK29xx series Processors at CES 2011". ARMdevices.net. 2011-01-07. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Rockchip SoCs Comparison Table, RK32xx Quad Core Cortex A12 Coming Up in 2014". CNXSoft. 2013-07-27. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  30. ^ a b "RK292X". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  31. ^ "Rockchip RK3066 RISC Application Processor". PDAdb.net. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  32. ^ "Rockchip RK3066/RK30xx Processors Documentation, Source Code and Tools". CNXSoft. 2012-11-04. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  33. ^ "Schematics for RK3066 reference tablet (RK3066_REF_2CELL)" (PDF). Google Code. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  34. ^ "RK3066 datasheet brief" (PDF). Google Code. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  35. ^ "RK3066". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  36. ^ "$37 GK328 Android mini PC Powered by Rockchip RK3028 Dual Core Processor". CNXSoft. 2014-03-04. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  37. ^ "RK3026". Rockchip. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  38. ^ "ruì xīn wēi shuāng hé、sì hé píng bǎn lǜ xiān shēng jí Android 4.4". Rockchip. 2013-12-04. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  39. ^ a b "RK3036". Rockchip. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  40. ^ Nouveau, Trent (2013-01-11). "Rockchip preps quad-core ARM processor". TG Daily. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g "RK3188". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  42. ^ "Rockchip Launches New Tablet SoCs on GLOBALFOUNDRIES' 28nm HK". Rockchip. 2013-06-20. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "GPU GFLOPS". GPU GFLOPS. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  44. ^ "Rockchip Unveils RK3168 Dual Core Processor, Showcases $10 Miracast Adapter". CNXSoft. 2013-04-14. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  45. ^ a b c "RK3168". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  46. ^ a b "Rockchip RK3126". Rockchip. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  47. ^ a b "Rockchip RK3128". Rockchip. Retrieved 2014-10-23.
  48. ^ a b "RK32 Series". rock-chips.com. Rockchip. Retrieved 16 July 2014.
  49. ^ a b "Review of UyeSee G1H Rockchip RK3288 Android TV Box". CNXSoft. 2014-08-27. Retrieved 2014-09-19.
  50. ^ a b "ARM Cortex-A17 / Cortex-A12 processor update". ARM. 2014-10-01. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  51. ^ "Mali-T760". Arm.com. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  52. ^ "ARM and GLOBALFOUNDRIES to Optimize Next-Generation ARM Mobile Processors for 28nm-SLP Process Technology". BusinessWire. 2013-06-03. Retrieved 2014-09-19.
  53. ^ "Rockchip RK3288 vs RK3188 Performance Comparison". CNXSoft. 2014-01-10. Retrieved 2014-09-19.
  54. ^ a b "Rockchip Introduces RK3368 Octa Core Cortex A53 SoC for Tablets and 4K TV Box". CNX Software - Embedded Systems News. CNX Software. 2015-01-07. Retrieved 2015-01-08.
  55. ^ "More Details about Rockchip RK3399 Cortex A72 SoC: 4K H.264/H.265/VP9, USB 3.0, PCIe, and DisplayPort". cnx-software.com. 2016-02-23. Retrieved 2016-07-30.
  56. ^ Sahaj Sarup, ed. (2019-04-18). "Panfrost Open-Source GPU Driver on the Rock960". 96 boards. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  57. ^ Alyssa Rosenzweig, ed. (2018-09-02). "Panfrost on the RK3399 (Meow!)". rosenzweig.io. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  58. ^ Jean-Luc Aufranc, ed. (2018-01-08). "Rockchip RK3399Pro SoC Integrates a 2.4 TOPS Neural Network Processing Unit for Artificial Intelligence Applications".
  59. ^ a b "Rockchip RK3566, RK3588, RV1109 SoC's Coming in 2020 based on Rockchip Processor Roadmap". CNX Software - Embedded Systems News. 2020-02-01. Retrieved 2020-02-10.
  60. ^ "Quartz64". PINE64. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  61. ^ "EM3566 SBC". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  62. ^ "Compact3566". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  63. ^ "CM3566 SOM". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  64. ^ "PICO3566". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  65. ^ "CM3568 SOM". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  66. ^ "Idea3588 SBC". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2022-04-30.
  67. ^ "CM3588 SOM". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  68. ^ a b c d "China Fabless: Allwinner's secret to tablet IC success". EE Times. 2013-04-09. p. 2. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  69. ^ a b "Here's Why Intel Needs to Impress at Computex". The Motley Fool. 2014-05-18. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  70. ^ "China fabless: Actions Semi targets non-Apple market". EE Times. 2013-04-02. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  71. ^ "Spreadtrum Enters the Tablet Market". PR Newswire. 2014-01-21. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  72. ^ "LC1913". Leadcore. Archived from the original on August 19, 2014. Retrieved August 16, 2014.
  73. ^ "Digitimes Research: Tablet AP shipments to China to rise 53% in 3Q13". DigiTimes. 2013-09-23. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  74. ^ "Digitimes Research: Over 50% white-box tablets to come with phone functions in 2H14; MediaTek to benefit most". DigiTimes. 3 April 2014. Retrieved 2014-04-22.
  75. ^ "Intel / Rockchip XMM 6321 Solution for Low Cost 3G Smartphones and Tablets". CNXSoft. 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2014-10-23.
  76. ^ "3rd party jelly bean for RK2918". XDA Developers. 2012-09-24. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  77. ^ "Avoca Support — Avoca 7" Tablet STB7012". Avoca. Archived from the original on 2013-07-16. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  78. ^ RK30xx Technical Reference Manual. Rockchip. 2012.
  79. ^ "Dual Core Rockchip RK3066 module combining ARM Cortex A9 CPU and Mali-400 MP GPU". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  80. ^ "What products does MiniX show us in 2013? New Quad Core Model Neo X7 and X5+ Coming! - Geek Gadgets". Blog.geekbuying.com. 2013-04-12. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  81. ^ "Review for UG008 TV box". Blog.geekbuying.com. 2013-03-15. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  82. ^ Measy Electronics Co., Ltd. (2013-12-17). "U2A Dual-core Mini MPC-Measy Electronics - Measy Electronics Co., Ltd". Measy.com.cn. Archived from the original on 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  83. ^ Measy Electronics Co., Ltd. (2013-11-19). "U2C Dual-Core BT+Cam Mini PC-Measy Electronics - Measy Electronics Co., Ltd". Measy.com.cn. Archived from the original on 2013-12-30. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  84. ^ "AllMiniPC Team Forum - View topic - Tomato V8 unboxing photos". Allminipc.com. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  85. ^ "Hisense E270BSA Sero 7 LT performance in GFXBench – unified graphics benchmark based on DXBenchmark (DirectX) and GLBenchmark (OpenGL ES)". Gfxbench.com. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  86. ^ "Compact3128". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  87. ^ "7" Dual Core 8GB". RCA Tablets. Archived from the original on 2013-12-09. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  88. ^ "EM3188 SBC". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  89. ^ Yunteam.com. "NEO X7". MINIX. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  90. ^ "9-7 inch GoTab Quad Core Android Jelly Bean Tablet Retina Class– GTQ97". My-go.co. 2013-11-21. Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  91. ^ "newaydeals.com". newaydeals.com. Archived from the original on 2013-04-24. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  92. ^ "iMito QX1 Quad Core TV STICK Coming, iMito Fans Look Here! - Geek Gadgets". Blog.geekbuying.com. 2013-05-04. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  93. ^ "Pipo M8pro, New 9.4 Inch RK3188 Quad Core Tablet PC, with the New Launcher UI, Do you Like it? - Geek Gadgets". Blog.geekbuying.com. 2013-04-18. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  94. ^ "Ugoos release their new quad core mini pc(UG802B,UG007B,MK809III) base on RK3188, 2GB RAM and android 4.2 - Geek Gadgets". Blog.geekbuying.com. 2013-03-19. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  95. ^ "AllMiniPC Team Forum - View topic - Ugoos QC802 - First quad-core dongle based on RK3188". Allminipc.com. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  96. ^ "ifive x2". ifive. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  97. ^ "JinXing Digital CO.Ltd". Jxd.hk. Archived from the original on 2014-01-29. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  98. ^ "Tesco unveil the £119 Hudl - a low cost, Archos built tablet - Android - News + Articles". MoDaCo. Retrieved 2014-01-19.
  99. ^ "Loosen RAM on android". Retrieved 2014-05-12.
  100. ^ "Radxa Rock Single Board Computer" (PDF). radxa.com. 2013-12-21. Retrieved 2014-05-12.
  101. ^ "GoClever ORION 100". goclever.com. 2013-07-01. Retrieved 2014-07-06.
  102. ^ "Test Medion Lifetab S7852 Tablet". Notebookcheck. 2014-05-04. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  103. ^ "ARM Cortex A15/A17 SoCs Comparison – Nvidia Tegra K1 vs Samsung Exynos 5422 vs Rockchip RK3288 vs AllWinner A80". CNXSoft. 2014-05-21. Retrieved 2014-10-23.
  104. ^ "EM3288 SBC". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  105. ^ "Pipo P1 First Rockchip RK3288 Tablet Debuts at Hong Kong Electronics Fair". TabletNews. 2014-04-16. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  106. ^ "Pipo P8 Tablet With RK3288 Quad core CPU Gets Priced at $209". TabletNews. 2014-05-17. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  107. ^ "Teclast P90HD first RK3288 tablet now on Pre-sale". cngadget. 2014-05-29. Retrieved 2014-07-24.
  108. ^ "Tronsmart Orion R28 RK3288 TV BOX". GeekBuying. 2014-08-27. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
  109. ^ "Best Smartphones - March 2022".
  110. ^ "Insignia - Flex Elite - 7.85" - 16GB - White/Silver".
  111. ^ "ROCK64 is a Rockchip RK3328 Development Board with Up to 4GB RAM, 4K HDR, Gigabit Ethernet, and USB 3.0". 8 June 2017.
  112. ^ "Firefly ROC-RK3328-CC Development Board Now for Sale for $35 and Up". 8 January 2018.
  113. ^ "Rockchip-瑞芯微电子股份有限公司".
  114. ^ a b c "Rockchip RK3368 Datasheet" (PDF).
  115. ^ "Tronsmart Orion R68 RK3368 TV BOX". Tronsmart. 2015-06-29. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  116. ^ "Mini-PC doubles as open-spec, octa-core hacker SBC". 20 November 2015.
  117. ^ "TechManiaK.pl".
  118. ^ "More Details about Rockchip RK3399 Cortex A72 SoC: 4K H.264/H.265/VP9, USB 3.0, PCIe, and DisplayPort - CNX Software". 22 February 2016.
  119. ^ "IFive and Techvision Rockchip RK3399 Hybrid Tablet/Laptop to Run Android 6.0 or Remix OS 3.0 - CNX Software". 16 October 2016.
  120. ^ "EM3399 SBC". Boardcon Embedded Design. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  121. ^ "Samsung Chromebook Pro Powered by Rockchip RK3399 SoC to Sell for $499 - CNX Software". 15 October 2016.
  122. ^ "PiPo V5 Android Virtual Reality Headset Powered by Rockchip RK3399 SoC to Sell for $200 - CNX Software". 18 October 2016.
  123. ^ a b "Intel Outs Cherry Trail Atom x5 and x7 SoCs; Entry-Level SoFIA Chips, Too". 2 March 2015.
  124. ^ "Product Specifications".
  125. ^ "Platform Code Named SoFIA 3G-R: Documents and Datasheets".
  126. ^ "Product Specifications".
  127. ^ "Product Specifications".
  128. ^ "Product Specifications".
  129. ^ "Product Specifications".
  130. ^ "Product Specifications".
  131. ^ "Intel Introduces New Mobile Atom x3, x5 and x7 Chips Based on Cherry Trail". 2 March 2015.
  132. ^ "Intel announces Atom X3 SoFIA, its new best bet for smartphone relevance".
  133. ^ "Product Specifications".
  134. ^ "Product Specifications".

External links[edit]