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DFRobot

· MPN: DFR1239

$322.25 |
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Build edge-AI robotics projects around the RDK X5, a high-performance development board designed for ROS robot applications. It combines eight A55 cores, 8GB...

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Build edge-AI robotics projects around the RDK X5, a high-performance development board designed for ROS robot applications. It combines eight A55 cores, 8GB RAM and dedicated 10 TOPS AI acceleration so demanding models can run directly on the robot rather than relying on the cloud.

The board provides practical connectivity for autonomous systems, including Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, Gigabit Ethernet with PoE, CAN FD and a wide range of USB, display, camera and GPIO interfaces. Dual MIPI CSI inputs support advanced machine vision and stereo vision workflows.

Development is streamlined with the Flash Connect approach, using a single Type-C connection for system programming, data transfer and debugging. Ubuntu 22.04 support, application examples, TogetheROS.Bot and system installation resources, a GitHub repository and official documentation are available for getting started.

The shipping list includes 1 x RDK X5 AI Board (8GB, 10Tops).

Features:

  • High-Performance Computing: 8x A55 cores @1.5GHz with 8GB RAM
  • AI Acceleration: 10 TOPS BPU + 32 GFLOPS GPU
  • Advanced Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6 & Bluetooth 5.4 with optional external antennas
  • Versatile I/O: 4x USB 3.0, HDMI, MIPI CSI/DSI, CAN FD, and 28 GPIOs
  • Media Processing: 4K60 H.265/H.264 encoding/decoding

Specifications:

  • CPU: 8x A55@1.5GHz
  • RAM: 8GB LPDDR4
  • BPU: 10 TOPS
  • GPU: 32Gflops
  • Storage: Micro SD card support
  • Multimedia: H.265/H.264 up to 3840x2160@60fps
  • Camera Input: 2 x 4-lane MIPI CSI
  • USB Host: 4 x USB 3.0 (Type-A)
  • USB Device: 1 x USB 2.0 (Type-C)
  • Audio: 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Display Outputs: HDMI (1080p60) + MIPI DSI 4 Lane
  • Wireless: Wi-Fi 6 & Bluetooth 5.4
  • Wired Network: Gigabit Ethernet with PoE
  • CAN: 1x CAN FD
  • GPIO: 28 pins (5x UART, 8x PWM, 3x I2C, 2x SPI, 1x I2S)
  • Power: 5V/5A
  • OS Support: Ubuntu 22.04

A strong fit for ROS robotics, machine vision, YOLO deployment, autonomous platforms and other edge-AI projects needing local inference and broad I/O.

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

DSI
DSI stands for Display Serial Interface, a high-speed connection commonly used to send video data from a computer board to a display. It matters because DSI signals are not simple GPIO wires, so the cable, connector, and signal routing need to match the display interface.
GFLOPS
GFLOPS means billions of floating-point operations per second, a rough measure of computing speed for maths-heavy tasks. For AI and vision projects, higher GFLOPS can mean the board and module combination can process more data or run larger models.
GPIO
General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
H.265
A video compression standard, also called HEVC, that reduces video file size and bandwidth compared with older formats. It matters for vision and AI projects because hardware H.265 encode/decode support can handle many camera streams more efficiently.
HDMI
HDMI is a common digital video and audio connection used by computers, media players, and many displays. If a display kit has HDMI input, it is usually much easier to test with a single-board computer because it can act like a normal monitor.
I2C
I2C is a two-wire communication bus used by many sensors and small modules. It matters because several I2C devices can share the same two wires, but each device needs a compatible address and your controller must support I2C.
I2S
I2S is a digital audio interface used to send sound data between chips, such as from a microcontroller to an audio amplifier or DAC. It matters if your project needs cleaner digital audio output than a basic buzzer or PWM signal can provide.
LPDDR4
A low-power type of RAM commonly used in phones and embedded computers. More LPDDR4 memory lets a board run larger programs, Linux services, or AI models more smoothly.
MIPI
MIPI is a high-speed display and camera interface often used inside phones, tablets, and embedded devices. It matters because raw MIPI displays usually need special driver hardware or software support, unlike plug-and-play HDMI screens.
PoE
Power over Ethernet lets one Ethernet cable carry both network data and electrical power. This is useful when installing a device where running a separate power adaptor would be difficult.
PWM
Pulse Width Modulation is a way for a digital pin to simulate variable output power by switching on and off very quickly. It matters for controlling things like LED brightness, motor speed, or servo-style signals from a microcontroller pin.
RAM
RAM is temporary memory used while a device is running, and its contents are lost when power is removed. A “Run in RAM” mode is useful for testing settings without permanently programming the module, but it may not support every feature.
ROS
ROS, the Robot Operating System, is a set of software tools and libraries commonly used to build robot projects. Mentioning ROS support suggests the board has the kinds of interfaces and processing power often needed for cameras, sensors and robot control.
SPI
A fast serial communication bus often used for displays, memory cards, and sensors. It matters because SPI devices need specific pins for clock and data, plus a separate chip-select line for each device.
TOPS
TOPS means trillions of operations per second, often used to describe AI accelerator performance. It helps compare whether a computing module is suited to lightweight image recognition or more demanding neural-network workloads.
UART
UART is a simple serial connection that sends data over separate transmit and receive wires, often labelled TX and RX. It matters because this module is designed to replace a wired UART cable with a wireless link while keeping the same serial data format.
USB host
A USB host is the side of a USB connection that controls attached devices, like a computer talking to a keyboard or flash drive. This matters because most microcontroller boards are normally USB devices, so adding USB host support lets them use common USB peripherals.
Wi-Fi 6
A newer Wi-Fi standard that can improve speed, range, and efficiency compared with older Wi-Fi versions. It matters for projects that need reliable wireless networking, especially where many devices share the same network.

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