PixiePro Board Combines NXP i.MX6Q Processor with WiFi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, NFC, GPS, and a 3G Modem

Saying that the market now provides a wide range of development boards is probably an understatement, but Code Ing has found out that most hobbyist boards had limited on-board wireless connectivity with WiFi and Bluetooth basically the best you could expect, with any extra wireless functionality requiring USB dongles. So the company designed PixiePro single board computer powered by NXP i.MX6Q quad core Cortex A9 processor with on-board wireless connectivity including WiFi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, GPS/GLONASS, NFC and a 3G module.

PixiePro_Board

PixiePro board specifications:

  • SoC – NXP i.MX6Q quad core Cortex A9 processor @ 1 GHz with Vivante 2D and 3D GPUs
  • System Memory – 2GB 64-bit DDR3
  • Storage – 2x UHS-I micro SD card slot up to 104 MB/s
  • Video Output – micro HDMI up to 1080p60
  • Audio Output – HDMI and 3.5mm mini TOSLINK optical port/Line Out
  • Connectivity
    • WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac 2×2 MIMO with two antenna connectors
    • Bluetooth 4.2 LE, 2.1 + EDR
    • NFC – ISO 14443A/B, 18092, 15693, NFCIP-1, NFC Forum with one antenna connector
    • Cellular – UMTS/HSPA+ 3G module (Quectel UC20) with SIM card slot and 2x 3G antenna connectors (main and RX diversity)
    • GPS/GLONASS with antenna connector
  • USB – 2x USB 2.0 host ports, 1x micro USB OTG port
  • Sensors – 9-axis IMU (accelerometer, gyro and magnetometer)
  • Expansion – Two 60-pin expansion connectors for Gigabit Ethernet, 1x PCIe, SDIO, 2x MIPI, SATA-II, RGB666, USB 2.0 HS, CAN, SPI, 2x UART, 2x I2C, and GPIOs
  • Debugging – 4-pin debug port for serial console
  • Misc – Reset button, RTC + battery
  • Power Supply – 5V DC input
  • Dimensions – 91 x 52 mm
Click to Enlarge
Click to Enlarge

Since the two expansion headers are not exactly convenient for experimentation, the company will design a low cost adapter called PinsBoard that will fit into the 60-pin connector and provide a Raspberry Pi compatible header.

The board currently supports Arch Linux ARM, and they have a Wiki with some documentation, including guides for WiFi, Bluetooth and 3G, as well schematics in PDF. You can also get support via their Forums.

The board was first showcased at FTF 2015 last year, where it was called PixieBoard, so there should already be some out in the wild. The company has launched the board in mid December for $99.50 + shipping, which unless you are based in the US, will add $30 to $50 to the cost. You can find all details on Treats4Geeks.com.

Thanks to Guillaume for the tip.

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6 Replies to “PixiePro Board Combines NXP i.MX6Q Processor with WiFi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, NFC, GPS, and a 3G Modem”

  1. How quickly Freescale imx6 has turned into NXP’s.) I even got confused for the instant.
    Well, as always with the freescale’s chips – too expensive and nothing special to approve this. 1GHz processor (cortex-a9!) for 2016 is just a joke. Even TI was getting on a15 at least. Meanwhile chinese vendors are getting on cortex-a72. I never understood this lagging. I think noone wants to spend 100+ $ for the board which should appear somewhere like ~5 years ago. And no ethernet. I heard due to internal bus restriction imx6 can’t manage GbE at full speed, so it’s even good that it’s moved on expansion header. In general – meh.

  2. The unfortunate thing about this board are the hidden costs for the antennas in order to actually use the features it is supposed to shine at (3G, GPS and high-speed dual-band WiFi/BT). Just look at the outrageous prices for accessories in their shop:

    -extraction tool for antennas: $29.57 (this has to be a bad joke!)
    -WiFi + BT antenna: $23.07
    -GPS antenna: $28.85
    -3G diversity antenna: $10.35

    Even assuming that I don’t need the extraction tool, I would have to add the cheapest shipping option they offer to Germany ($37.04 if I only ordered the board, $44.30 if I ordered the board and the three antennas mentioned above; WTF?), the board together with the antennas, would cost me $245.22 (including shipping and import tax).

    To boot, according to their web shop, the $99.50 for the board is an introductory price with $129.95 being the standard price.

    So, sadly, not a deal for me, since the board specs are actually pretty nice. But I wouldn’t pay more than a total of, say, $150 for the whole package, and this is $95 too much at the introductory price level and would be $131 too much at the standard price level.

  3. @Henry
    it’s cool and stuff and what makes freescale look respectable. still it in no way does validate such an overpricing. i think. TI’s sitara of am5xxx also are suitable for that use and have the same “long term device availability commitment”, but it has a15 inside (still costs pretty much though).

  4. @Abdullbasit
    yah, I meant this, I was wondering about how fast ‘freescale’ label is disappearing. Compaq has been bought by HP in like 2002 and even now it’s not rare to see ‘compaq’ labeled laptops.) It’s just kinda frustrating, what the new owner will be doing with the ppc architecture. I’m interested in those, don’t want they discard it.

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