
So the Banana Pi BPI-CM2 SoM will be mainly interesting for new or upgraded designs making use of the four high-speed connectors.

In terms of Raspberry Pi CM4 compatibility, the Rockchip RK3568-based Banana Pi BPI-CM2 provides no benefits (that I can see) over competing Rockchip RK3566 modules such as Radxa CM3 or Pine64 SOQuartz since it provides the same performance and the extra I/Os are not available on existing carrier boards for the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4.įor example, our RK3566 vs RK3568 comparison shows the latter supports three displays, so having two HDMI ports and a MIPI DSI port would be possible in theory, but this would require an additional eDP to HDMI chip that’s not present on the latest Banana Pi module.
#Car os for raspberry pi Bluetooth
Optional Ampak AP6256 WiFI 5 and Bluetooth 5.0 module.System Memory – 2GB to 8GB LPDDR4/LPDDR4x.

GPU – Arm Mali-G52 2EE GPU with support for OpenGL ES 1.1/2.0/3.2, OpenCL 2.0, Vulkan 1.1.CPU – Quad-core Cortex-A55 processor up to 2.0 GHz.The Rockchip RK3568 module comes with many of the same features and options as the Raspberry Pi CM4 with 2GB to 8GB RAM, 8GB to 256GB eMMC flash, optional WiFi 5 and Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity, and an on-module Ethernet transceiver, in this case, a Realtek RTL8211F. Banana Pi BPI-CM2 is another Raspberry Pi CM4-compatible system-on-module, this time based on a Rockchip RK3568 quad-core Cortex-A55 SoC and with a twist as besides the two 100-pin high-density connectors, the module adds two 70-pin high-density connectors for the extra I/Os provided by the Rockchip processor such as PCIe 3.0, USB 3.0, eDP, MIPI DSI, and an additional Gigabit Ethernet.
