this post was submitted on 31 Jul 2024
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I'm a huge fan of octoprint on raspberry pi. I'm not a huge fan of raspberry pi lately. I've heard of le potato and orange pi. Some searching shows that people have done it on both of those.

Does anyone have any experience running it on a small board computer other than raspi?

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[–] EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Intel N100 mini PC*.

*= those are on the same process node as the problematic i7/i9 13th and 14th gen CPU. With Intel this quiet on the true cause/issue they might as well also be considered faulty.

[–] rhandyrhoads@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Weren't they pretty straight up saying it was a microcode issue with a patch coming out? Affecting 65 watt+ CPUs which also wasn't in the limelight since only the high end i7/i9 CPUs were seeing significant failures being reported. I'd imagine a mini PC would be pretty safe.

[–] EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

At this point, it is not a technical issue but also a trust issue:

They started with people overclocking their CPUs and that is the cause.

They moved on to the mainboard vendors are the bad guy.

Now they are at we screwed up but the microcode update will fix everything and yes we had oxidation issues we told nobody about and no we won't recall those units we know are faulty (oxidation issue).

only the high end i7/i9 CPUs were seeing significant failures being reported

I think Intel now says it is everything with 65W+ TDP.

[–] computergeek125@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

They confirmed that there was a range of CPUs affected by a fabrication issue outside of the press release that went to media. So while we know about the i7/i9, manufacturing process is often shared between different CPU models and with Intel being opaque about what they found it's hard to understand what actually happened and what's truly unaffected.

Ref: GamersNexus
https://youtu.be/OVdmK1UGzGs