amuck-landowner

Looking for a Raspberry Pi alternative with 2 ethernet ports.

KuJoe

Well-Known Member
Verified Provider
I just had an idea pop into my head and now I'm looking for a Raspberry Pi alternative that has 2 ethernet ports for a project I want to work on. I don't care about any of the specs as long as it has 2 ethernet ports (even 10Mbps will do), it runs some version of Debian, and is under $100 with a case.

I found a system called a Utilite Standard but it's over the $100 mark and looks a little bulky compared to the RPi (the smaller the better for this project).

Thanks! :)
 

KuJoe

Well-Known Member
Verified Provider
I would prefer to not have to use any adapters. The smaller the better and all of the USB to ethernet adapters I've seen are to big for my idea.
 

rds100

New Member
Verified Provider
Do you need GPIOs? Or just a board with CPU and ehternets? How large form factor is acceptable?
 

drmike

100% Tier-1 Gogent
Tough one....

Only thing that know of, that is available and relatively affordable, shipping now previously with the dual NICs build in is the Dreamplug:

http://www.globalscaletechnologies.com/t-dreamplugdetails.aspx

It's a piece with Marvell stuff (i.e. "plug" computers).

There are also a number of router boards folks have used over the years that are probably more in line with your needs.    PC Engines has the age old alix line and a newer apu platform:

http://www.pcengines.ch/index.htm
 

pcan

New Member
The cheapest option is a mini-itx standard motherboard with integrated CPU (Atom or E350) and dual LAN. There are many of them; look at http://www.mini-itx.com/store/boards for some examples. The $100 goal for the complete system is realistic and you can use any standard operating system and software.

PC Engines products aren't cheap because they target the professional market. I have a Alix 1C board; it is basically a thin client motherboard. PC Engines boards with multiple LAN sockets have a proprietary BIOS and no VGA output, and this will limit your selection of "ready to boot" operating systems.
 

willie

Active Member
Soekris.com has some nice boards like that, though again they are a bit outside your price range.  They are more seriously built than the raspberry pi is.
 
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