This page provides download options and build information for the Orange Pi Zero2W board using Armbian. It features a Debian Minimal variant based on Debian 13 trixie with kernel version 6.18.26. Users can download the image directly or via torrent, and instructions are included for building the image from source using the Armbian framework.
Main topics:
- Available software variants and distributions
- Kernel version information
- Download links and file sizes
- Instructions for manual builds from source
The Orange Pi Zero 3W is a compact single board computer designed with the Raspberry Pi Zero form factor. It is powered by the Allwinner A733 octa-core SoC, featuring an Arm Cortex-A76/A55 architecture and a dedicated RISC-V real-time core. The board supports up to 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM and offers versatile storage options including microSD, eMMC, and UFS.
Key specifications and features:
- Allwinner A733 SoC with 3 TOPS NPU for AI acceleration
- Up to 16GB LPDDR5 memory at 4,800 MT/s
- Video support including mini HDMI 2.0 (up to 4Kp60) and USB-C DisplayPort Alt mode
- Connectivity featuring WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, and a PCIe Gen3 x1 connector
- Dual MIPI CSI camera connectors and MIPI DSI display connector
- Affordable pricing starting from $25 for the 1GB RAM version
The NanoPi NEO3 Plus is a compact, headless single-board computer:
- Rockchip RK3528A SoC with 1GB of RAM
- Gigabit Ethernet, a USB 3.0 port, and a 26-pin GPIO header
- 2.0 GHz quad-core Cortex-A53 processor
- Debian, Ubuntu, OpenMediaVault, Proxmox, and FriendlyWrt, openclaw
- $24, plus $8 case and 64GB or 256GB eMMC module for $23 or $61
Orange Pi has announced the Orange Pi AI Station, a compact edge computing platform featuring the Ascend 310 processor, offering up to 176 TOPS of AI compute performance with options for up to 96GB of LPDDR4X memory and NVMe storage.
ADSB.im provides easy‑to‑install feeder images for tracking aircraft, ships, weather balloons and more using single‑board computers, SDR dongles and antennas. The project supports ADS‑B, AIS, Sonde and ACARS/VDL2/HFDL data, offering web UI setup, aggregator integration and open‑source tools.
A project detailing the creation of a single board computer based on the Fairchild F8 microprocessor. The article describes the initial build, testing, and documentation process. Build files and documentation are available for download.
The new standard for embedded computing. Leverage Raspberry Pi 5’s powerful hardware and efficient software stack in your own custom embedded systems. Available now from $45.
Justin Garrison demonstrates how to use a Raspberry Pi or other single-board computer to run a local Personal Data Server (PDS) for the microblogging platform Bluesky, allowing users to store and manage their own data.