Compute Module 4-based industrial controller available for purchase
TECHBASE’s ModBerry industrial computer series has received an update to Compute Module 4 and is available for pre-orders. TECHBASE is leading manufacturer of Industrial Raspberry Pi and Industrial Compute Module solutions. ModBerry 500 series is fully compatible with all releases of Compute Module from Rasbperry Pi foundation.
Main features of updated device are:
- up to 4x faster eMMC Flash with up to 32GB storage
- up to 2x faster performance of CPU apllications than previous CM3 version
- up to 8x more RAM (8GB LPDDR4)
- optional 1Gbit Ethernet interface
- optional PCIe card support for NVMe SSD drive (via M.2)
- optional second PCIe support for wireless modem solutions
First orders will be ready with subject to the availability of the CM4 module itself.
Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 world premiere
Few days ago, Raspberry Foundation announced new member of its family, a Rasbperry Pi Compute Module 4. It’s quite obvious, even from the first look, that the new module is very different from its predecessors. Main difference is a new form factor, leaving DDR2 SODIMM in the past.
The same 64-bit quad-core BCM2711 application processor as in Raspberry Pi 4B, the Compute Module 4 brings higher performance: faster CPU cores, better multimedia, more interfacing capabilities, and, for the first time, a choice of RAM densities and a wireless Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity options.
Compute Module 4 comes in 32 variants. Lite, as always, offers no eMMC memory, a and standard versions come with up to 8GB RAM, 32 eMMC Flash and wireless modem.
New features of Compute Module 4
- 1.5GHz quad-core 64-bit ARM Cortex-A72 CPU as in Raspberry Pi 4 version B
- 1GB, 2GB, 4GB or 8GB LPDDR4-3200 SDRAM
- 8GB, 16GB or 32GB eMMC Flash storage for Standard version, Lite version without eMMC
- Optional 2.4GHz and 5GHz IEEE 802.11b/g/n/ac wireless LAN and Bluetooth 5.0
- Single-lane PCI Express 2.0 interface
- Gigabit Ethernet PHY with IEEE 1588 support
- Dual HDMI interfaces, at resolutions up to 4K
- 28 GPIO pins, with up to 6 × UART, 6 × I2C and 5 × SPI
Source: https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/raspberry-pi-compute-module-4/