I ordered a Banana Pi around Thanksgiving, it arrived today.
For $50, its a totally different system to the Raspberry Pi but at the same time it's compatible to it. Lets face the facts...
The Banana Pi is a Chinese Clone of the Raspberry Pi put onto steroids. Where the R-Pi was developed in the UK for the educational market, the Chinese developed the B-Pi for the same reason but adding more functions and ports to it. The Chinese gov't and companies contracted to make the R-Pi for both the UK, Asian and World-Wide markets decided on their own to make the B-Pi and make it compatible to the R-Pi.
Problem with this is to make the B-Pi more powerful, a more powerful ARM processor was use; the R-Pi uses the A10, and the B-Pi uses the A20 (a dual core version of the A10 with added functions, same cpu used on the Cubie Board). This keeps the software compatibility with the R-Pi as high as possible. But the OS used on the R-Pi can not work on the B-Pi though the OS for the B-Pi can be used on the R-Pi. So to use Raspbian on the B-Pi, you need to get the version made for the B-Pi. But once you have it, you can download all the R-Pi software and it will work for the most part. There might be a couple of pieces of software that will not work for the B-Pi, but that is yet to be tested thoroughly.
The Banana Pi with it's more RAM and Dual Core Processor can support the Android system. The Raspberry Pi was supposed to support the Android system but there has been problems; both Pi's use more or less the same CPU/RAM set up used in many tablets and smart phones that uses the Android OS.
Currently I am downloading Raspbian for the B-Pi. More posts to follow.
From a forum/wiki that supports the Banana Pi (
http://wiki.lemaker.org/Main_Page ):
Hardware Specifications
Banana Pi Hardware Specific Sheet
Item | Description |
CPU | Allwinner A20* (ARM Cortex-A7 dual-core 2 x 1.0GHz) |
GPU | ARM Mali400MP2 - complies with OpenGL ES 2.0/1.1) |
System Memory (SDRAM) | 1GB DDR3 (shared with GPU) |
Onboard Storage | SD/MMC card slot max. 64GB; up to 2TB on a SATA disk |
Onboard Network | 10/100/1000 Ethernet RJ45 (optional USB WiFi Dongle) |
Video Output | HDMI, Composite (AV video), extendable with the on-board LVDS connector |
Audio I/O | HDMI, 3.5mm stereo jack output, on-board microphone input |
USB | 2 x USB 2.0 ports, 1 x OTG micro-USB port, 1 x micro-USB for power supply |
Expansion | Extendable 26-pin GPIO (General Purpose Input/Output) headers, camera connector, display connector for LVDS and a touch screen |
Misc | 3 x on-board buttons(Power Switch, Reset, U-boot key); IR receiver |
Dimensions | 92mm x 60 mm |
Weight | 48g |
Due to the limited power output from a computer's USB port, we suggest only powering the B-Pi with a good quality 5V/2A PSU.