Qualcomm’s IPQ4019 and IPQ4029 both feature Wave2 (or Wave 2) - the revised version of of 802.11ac (WiFi 5) radios with dual-band MU-MIMO technology for simultaneous WiFi connections to multiple devices. The Dakota and MikroTik boards run Linux, and the KEFU almost certainly does, as well. The KEFU DB11 offers support for five GbE ports. The MikroTik RB450Gx4 is more of a classic router board with 5x GbE ports, one of which supports PoE. The Dakota DR4019 and the almost identical Dakota DR4029 model, which uses the similar IPQ4029 SoC with extended temperature support, has 2x GbE ports, an optional SFP optical Ethernet port, and 802.11ac Wave2 WiFi. We also found another sandwich-style board with the IPQ4019 called the KEFU DB11 based on a ComIOT11 module (see farther below). Recently a pair of router boards based on the same chip have launched in China, as detailed in two CNXSoft reports on the Dakota DR40X9 and MikroTik RB450Gx4 Router Board SBCs. Three router SBCs that run Linux on Qualcomm’s quad -A7 IPQ4019 have reached market: The Dakota DR4019 with 2x GbE, optional SFP and Wave2 WiFi, MikroTik’s RB450Gx4 with 5x GbE and PoE, and a $200 Kefu DB11 dev kit.Įarlier this year, Qualcomm announced the Qualcomm Mesh Networking Development Kit with Alexa support featuring its Linux-friendly, quad-core, Cortex-A7 IPQ4019 (QCA4019) router SoC. Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Email
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