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Milk-V is a line of RISC-V single-board computers and system-on-modules developed by Shenzhen MilkV Technology Co., Ltd.[1] The product line includes several models targeting different use cases, from low-power embedded systems to high-performance computing.
History
editMilk-V was founded in 2023 by a group, "of passionate RISC-V enthusiasts"[2] with the goal of providing high-quality RISC-V products to developers, enterprises, and consumers.[3] The company aims to promote the development of the RISC-V hardware and software ecosystem.
Products
editMilk V Duo
editThe Milk V Duo is an embedded single-board computer (eSBC) based on the CVITEK CV1800B chip[4]. Key features include:
- Dual-core RV64 processor
- 64MB DDR2 RAM
- microSD card slot
- 10/100 Ethernet
- USB-C port
- 26 GPIO pins
- CSI 2-lane MIPI interface
- Hardware H.264/H.265 encoding support
The Duo is designed for low-power embedded applications and can run Linux or RTOS.[5]
Milk V Duo S
editThe Milk V Duo S is an upgraded version of the Duo, featuring:[6]
- SG2000 main controller
- 512MB RAM
- Optional onboard eMMC storage
- Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5 support
- Dual MIPI CSI camera interfaces
- MIPI DSI display output
- 100Mbps Ethernet with PoE support
- Ability to switch between RISC-V and ARM boot
Milk V Mars
editThe Milk V Mars is a credit card-sized single-board computer based on the StarFive JH7110 SoC.[7]Features include:
- Quad-core RV64GC processor (up to 1.5GHz)
- Up to 8GB LPDDR4 RAM
- eMMC module support
- HDMI 2.0 output (4K capable)
- Gigabit Ethernet with PoE support
- Multiple USB 3.0 ports
- M.2 E-Key slot for Wi-Fi/Bluetooth
- 40-pin GPIO header
Milk V Pioneer
editThe Milk V Pioneer is a high-performance RISC-V desktop motherboard.[8] Key specifications:
- SG2380 processor with 16-core SiFive P670 RISC-V CPU
- Imagination AXT-16-512 GPU
- 32 TOPS INT8 / 16 TFLOPS FP16 AI accelerator
- Up to 128GB DDR memory support
- PCIe Gen4 x16 slot
- Multiple display outputs (HDMI, DisplayPort)
Software support
editMilk V devices support various operating systems, including Linux distributions like Ubuntu.[9] The company collaborates with Canonical to optimize Ubuntu for their RISC-V platforms.[10]
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ "Milk-V". milkv.io. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ https://x.com/MilkV_Official
- ^ "Milk-V". milkv.io. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ Platima Tinkers (2023-09-02). Testing out the Milk-V Duo - The new $9 RISC-V eSBC that runs Linux!. Retrieved 2024-07-16 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Milk-V". milkv.io. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ Platima Tinkers (2024-05-11). Milk-V Duo S - Dual Boot RISC-V or ARM with Dual Camera, Wi-Fi and RTOS Capabilities!. Retrieved 2024-07-16 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Milk-V". milkv.io. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ "Milk-V". milkv.io. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ "Introducing the Milk V". blog.skill-issue.dev. 2024-07-12. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ "Canonical enables Ubuntu on Milk-V Mars, a credit-card-sized RISC-V SBC". Canonical. Retrieved 2024-07-16.