$98 Geek Force Mediatek MT7623 Router Board Features 6 GbE Ports, 3 mPCIe Slots for WiFi, 3G, or LTE (Crowdfunding)

We’ve seen a few interesting and relatively powerful router board launched last year, with the likes of MQMaker WiTi or Turris Omnia, AsiaRF has now designed Geek Force board powered by Mediatek MT7623N/MT7623A quad core network processor combined with 2GB RAM, six Gigabit Ethernet ports, and optional 802.11ac and 3G connectivity via the three mPCIe slots available on the board. The board also features two HDMI ports, and supports multimedia capabilities such as H.264, MPEG-2, or VC-1 hardware video decoding.

Geek_Force_Board
Click to Enlarge

Geek Force board preliminary specifications:

  • SoC – MediaTek MT7623A or MT7623N quad-core ARM Cotex-A7 @ 1.3GHz with Mali-450MP GPU (MT7623N only)
  • System Memory – 2GB DDR3
  • Storage – 2GB eMMC or NAND Flash + SD card slot up to 128 GB, and maybe SATA via the mPCIe slots
  • Connectivity – 6 Gigabit Ethernet ports (WAN / LAN behavior defined by firmware), 802.11 b/g/n WiFi & Bluetooth 4.0 via MT6625L with IPEX antenna connector for WiFi and Bluetooth, and optional 802.11ac WiFi, 3G an/or 4G via mPCIe slots.
  • Video – 2x HDMI (one input, one output), 1x RCA video output, MIPI DSI
  • Audio – HDMI, and optical S/PDIF input and output ports
  • USB – 1x USB 3.0 port, 1x USB 2.0 host port, 1x micro USB OTG port
  • Expansion
    • 3x mini PCIe
    • 26-pin “Raspberry Pi” header,
    • 10-pin PCM header
    • 10-pin SPI0 header
    • 6-pin Apple Auth CP (I2C) connector
    • 10-pin I2C + I2S header
    • Power header
  • Debugging – 1x 20-pin JTAG connector, 4-pin UART1 connector for serial console
  • Misc – IR receiver, power switch, 1x user switch
  • Power – 12V
  • Dimensions – N/A

The board will support OpenWrt, Android, and Ubuntu Snappy operating systems, likely on top of Linux 3.10 kernel. The SoC also features hardware NAT, hardware QoS, and hard crypto engine, which should all be supported by the board. While the specs indicates either MT7623A or M7623N processor might be used, the pictures shows MT7623N used in combination with MT7530B Ethernet switch. MT7623A embeds the Ethernet switch on-chip, but lacks a GPU, and has less video interfaces.

Geek_Force_Board_BottomApart from the specifications however, the company has not shared much technical information so far, not shown any demos, but I’ve been told a video should come after Chinese New Year holidays. Some parts of the specs are also unclear, for example whether the video interfaces are only output, or if some are input, and it’s not 100% clear the mPCIe slots also support SATA.Potential applications include Internet router, enterprise access point, home security system, home automation gateway, NAS, switch control processor, etc…

AsiaRF has launched a flexible funding Indiegogo campaign to raise funds for production. A $98 pledge should get you a Geek Force board with a power adapter and a “pigtail plus” antenna. There are also various other rewards for 802.11ac, 3G or 4G LTE mini PCie cards add-ons with SIM card slot, up to $192 for a Geek Force board with 4G LTE worldwide, and 802.11ac WiFi. Shipping added $30 to the destinations I tried, and delivery is scheduled for June 2016.

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24 Replies to “$98 Geek Force Mediatek MT7623 Router Board Features 6 GbE Ports, 3 mPCIe Slots for WiFi, 3G, or LTE (Crowdfunding)”

  1. The $192 bundle with LTE modem is a great deal, LTE modems are $100.
    Plus it should be possible to plug in a PCIe SATA card or even better, a PCIe SSD.

  2. @Jon Smirl
    You wouldn’t be able to boot from the PCIe SSD though, at least not without significant driver work and you’d still need to initialise the system from uBoot and then swap over to the PCIe SSD, so not sure what benefit it’d bring. That is if the SoC can support SSD’s in the first place.
    Haven’t managed to find a datasheet for this SoC yet, but it’s an interesting solution.

  3. I am really interrested in such a powerful board… it lacks sata, but i’m interested in i2s and spdif in&out 😀
    But 100,000$ in flexible funding ?! Cannot seriously back this, way too much risks of just losing my money.

  4. @TLS
    No reason to think that a CPU can’t support a SSD. The SSD is just a PCIe device. The CPU will do PCI transactions against it. It does not know it is a SSD. It is the device drivers that know it is a disk drive and that is just software. So if there are kernel drivers available for the PCI SSD there is hope to get it working.

    I do agree that it is unlikely that the SOC can boot from the PCI SSD without a flash based uboot helping. But desktop PCs don’t boot straight from a disk either, their BIOS helps.

  5. @Jon Smirl
    MTK always do English datasheets, so I highly doubt that translation is the issue. However, they don’t tend to release public datasheets and they tend to tie them to specific people at companies that request them.

    SSD manufacturers rarely provide any kind of drivers, as they tend to make them for Windows based computers or for controllers that translates them into something the OS can understand, such as via a SATA controller. So if you get a PCIe mSATA SSD with an onboard controller, you’re fine, however a pure PCIe SSD might require additional work.

  6. @GourouLubrik

    Flexible funding means that this product will ship even if they don’t get the full $100K. Flexible funding is common when some other party has already covered the development costs of the board. It does not mean that they get to keep the money if they don’t get to $100K. AsiaRF has been around ten years, this is not a random startup.

  7. @GourouLubrik
    The main issue with flexible funding is if the project gets little funds, in which case some companies may not be able to go with production, and they are not obligated to refund you. This is especially a problem with completely new companies, but as @Jon Smirl mentioned AsiaRF has been around for a while.

    I just wish they could spend a little more time and efforts to provide accurate and detailed info in their crowdfunding campaigns.

  8. @Jon Smirl
    @TLS
    I’ve previously seen mini PCIe slot with incomplete functionalities implemented, and since SATA is not explicitly mentioned anymore on their Indiegogo page, I’m not sure entirely whether it’s supported.

  9. @cnxsoft
    Don’t confuse things though, these are full PCIe slots, or things like Wi-Fi cards wouldn’t work with them.
    The issue isn’t so much SATA support, as there are mini PCIe SSD’s that have an onboard SATA controller and this would solve that issue. However, a PCIe only SSD might have problems with this, as it requires support on multiple levels, from UEFI to OS and I highly doubt uBoot can support it. On the other hand, there are some mini PCIe slots that are only wired for USB functionality and these are mostly useless. The mini PCIe standard should offer USB and PCIe support, but doesn’t always offer both. A lot of low-cost mini PCIe devices are USB only as well, so this is something to pay attention to when you buy mini PCIe cards, as they might not be what you expected.

  10. Is the WiFi on board or in one of the PCIe slots? I wonder whether $98 and $88 has a Wifi or not. Also the $112 “11ac WiFi Geek Force Board Change Perk Geek Force Board add one MT7612E 11ac PCIe card” has no Antenna mentioned.

  11. @tkaiser
    Different design, so they likely made their own.
    Mediatek MT762x boards (see FireWrt, WiQi router, Geek Force) tend to be canceled or not very successfully for whatever reason, possibly high cost for low volume.

  12. @cnxsoft
    Well, at least in the past Foxconn contracted 3rd parties to do the ODM work for their various Banana offerings (Xunlong did the original A20 based Banana Pi for example) and then SinoVoip took over for manufacturing. This might explain why they always struggle releasing schematics (for BPi-R1 it took them almost one year) and sometimes had not the slightest idea how ‘their own’ hardware works (horrible memories regarding R1 and M2 here — without community reverse-engineering maybe some stuff still wouldn’t work on these boards).

    Anyway: MT762x seems not the best ‘category’ since MT7621A is dual core MIPS 1004Kc processor @ 880Mhz and DRAM being limited to 512MB max while MT7623 means quad-core Cortex-A7 and up to 2 GB DRAM. Hardware specs of this BPi-R2 look interesting but since it’s all about software and support it’s already known what to expect (and this time there isn’t linux-sunxi community involved to fix vendor flaws 😉 )

  13. @cnxsoft
    According to rumours (linux-sunxi IRC) BPi-R2 won’t be available with datasheet/usermanual for the SoC due to expensive MediaTek NDA (maybe not even 3.10 kernel sources released — there’s rudimentary support for mt7623 in mainline kernel but that won’t help much). So maybe that’s also one of the reasons why these designs aren’t that successful?

    We’ll see and at least I won’t buy products without a strong community around able to fix vendor’s mistakes.

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