Libre Computer Refreshes the Le Potato Line with the New, PoE-Capable Sweet Potato SBC

Taking aim at industrial applications, the low-cost Sweet Potato includes an internal USB header and Power-over-Ethernet capabilities.

Libre Computer has announced a surprise refresh to its Raspberry Pi-like Le Potato single-board computer (SBC), turning it into the "Sweet Potato" — offering the same form factor but with Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) and USB Type-C power options.

"[The] Libre Computer AML-S905X-CC-V2 Sweet Potato board is an all digital complimentary design to the long term supported AML-S905X-CC(-V1) Le Potato platform," Libre Computer says of its latest board design, brought to our attention by Linux Gizmos. "Like Le Potato, it is designed for 4k media, with a 40-pin header compatible with a variety of HATs [Hardware Attached on Top boards]. It does not replace Le Potato since it is designed to address different markets."

Libre Computer has launched a new entry in the Potato family of single-board computers, the Sweet Potato. (📷: Libre Computer)

Those "different markets," Libre Computer hopes, are "commercial and consumer applications" who would seek to integrate the new variant into product designs. As a result, most of the changes are connectivity-related: the analog audio/video (AV) jack has been removed to clear room for a Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) header, which can be used in place of the new USB Type-C connector to power the board; there's a general-purpose input/output (GPIO) pin for controlling power to the on-board microSD card reader; support for eMMC modules, plus 16MB of SPI flash for boot storage; and an internal USB header, along with the board's existing four USB Type-A ports.

"The internal 5-pin USB header enables the use of USB Video Class (UVC) cameras in embedded designs," Libre Computer explains. "As a high speed bus, it [also] enables a whole new classes of applications not available previously. The pinout sequence is the same as the standard PC 9-pin header. Another application for this header is for attaching custom RF [Radio-Frequency] solutions such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, Matter, and even software-defined-radio (SDR)."

Like the Raspberry Pi 4, the Sweet Potato needs a HAT add-on to unlock PoE support. (📷: Libre Computer)

Elsewhere, the board's features are the same as its predecessor Le Potato: four USB Type-A ports, a single 10/100 Ethernet port, a Raspberry Pi-compatible 40-pin GPIO header, a dedicated three-pin header for a debug UART, a three-pin Consumer Electronic Control (CEC) jumper header, a single HDMI 2.0 output, an eight-pin audio header, and an on-board infrared sensor.

These are all connected to the same Amlogic S905X system-on-chip (SoC) with the same four Arm Cortex-A53 cores running at up to 1.5GHz and an Arm Mali-450 GPU, though with a move from DDR3 to DDR4 RAM — with only a 2GB model available at retail, with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) able to order a 1GB model if required as well as swapping the USB Type-C connector for micro-USB.

The Sweet Potato is now available to order on the LoveRPI website for $30, a launch discount over the standard $35 retail price; the PoE board is a separate purchase, priced at $20.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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