ODROID Magazine
Lakka: Building The Ultimate ODROID-XU4 / XU4Q Gaming Console
Introduction and Tutorial Goals Hello and welcome to our ODROID-XU4 Lakka gaming console build tutorial. This review will show you in detail how to build a powerful Lakka based retro video game console from scratch. You will need some parts. I've listed the ones I used above and placed a ▶
Networking At Ludicrous Speed: Blasting Through The 10000Mbps Network Speed Limit With The ODROID-H2
I remember being an early adopter of 1 GbE networking in the 90s and many of my friends were wondering: who needs 1 GbE anyway? Twenty years later, I am an early adopter (but really not the first) of faster than 10 GbE at home and I hope that this ▶
Is That a Linux Computer in Your Pocket, or Are You Just Glad to See Me?: Build an ODROID Computer You Can Carry in Your Pocket
Fresh on the heels of the ODROID Tablet project, https://magazine.odroid.com/article/build-a-rootin-tootin-dual-bootin-odroid-tablet-using-the-odroid-c0-to-make-a-professional-grade-tablet-for-under-usd100/, comes an even more portable version of the ODROID-C0. Rather than sporting a large-scale HDMI-equipped LCD, this “pocket ‘puter” relies on a framebuffer-driven video output displayed on a 3.2-inch thin-film-transistor (TFT) touchscreen shield dubbed the C1. While this touchscreen shield ▶
Low Cost Water Cooling for your Single Board Computer: Get The Maximum Speed From Your ODROID
SBC water cooling is not new and others have implemented designs using off the shelf components for the ODROID-XU4 and other SBC. Some implementations have already been covered in ODROID Magazine in the past. December 2016 https://magazine.odroid.com/wp-content/uploads/ODROID-Magazine-201612.pdf July 2018 https://magazine.odroid.com/article/liquid-cooling-part-1-cluster/ https://magazine.odroid.com/article/liquid-cooling-part-2-server/ The focus of this project was initially to make ▶
Monku R3: Building The Ultimate ODROID-XU4 / XU4Q Gaming Console - Part 1
Requirements Tools: A small screwdriver set that contains a few small Phillips head screwdrivers. A clean static free work surface. Monitor or TV with HDMI support to test the device. Mac SD card image writing software. I use balenaEtcher, it is free and works great. Window SD card image writing ▶