AAEON PICO-ARU4 might be the world’s first Pico-ITX SBC powered by Intel Core Ultra 5/7 “Arrow Lake” (Series 2) processor family. More specifically, it’s available with the Core Ultra 5 225U or Core Ultra 7 255U, both with a 15W TDP.
It ships with up to 32GB LPDDR5 RAM, offers 2.5GbE and GbE networking, HDMI and eDP interfaces for up to two independent displays, two USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports, two USB 2.0 headers, two M.2 sockets for storage (NVMe SSD) and wireless expansion, two RS-232/422/485 headers, a 4-bit GPIO header, SMBus/I2C, and more.
AAEON PICO-ARU4 specifications:
- Arrow Lake SoC (one of the other)
- Intel Core Ultra 5 225U 12-core (2P+8E+2LPE) processor @ up to 4.8 GHz turbo frequency, 12MB cache, 4x Xe-core Intel Graphics (8 TOPS), and Intel AI Boost (12 TOPS); PBP: TDP 15W
- Intel Core Ultra 7 255U 12-core (2P+8E+2LPE) processor @ up to 5.2 GHz, 12MB cache, 4x Xe-core Intel Graphics (8 TOPS), and Intel AI Boost (12 TOPS); PBP: 15W
- System Memory – 16GB or 32GB LPDDR5-6400 memory
- Storage
- M.2 2280 M-Key socket for NVMe SSD
- SATA III 6.0 Gb/s port and + 5V SATA power connector
- Video Output
- HDMI 1.4 up to 3840 x 2160 @30Hz
- eDP 1.4 connector
- Up to 2x simultaneous displays
- Networking
- 2.5GbE RJ45 port via Intel I226 controller
- Optional WiFi and Bluetooth via M.2 E-Key socket
- USB
- 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports
- 2x USB 2.0 (internal header)
- Serial – 2x RS-232/422/485 (COM1 and COM2), supports 5V/12V/RI)
- Expansion
- M.2 2230 E-Key socket (PCIe 4.0 x1 + USB 2.0)
- M.2 2280 M-Key socket (PCIe Gen 4 [x4] / SATA); default: PCIe [x4], select by BOM
- 4-bit DIO
- SMBus/I2C (Default: SMBus)
- Security – TPM 2.0
- Misc
- 4-wire smart fan connector
- Front Panel connector with HDD LED, PWR LED, Power Button, Buzzer, Reset
- 3V/240mAh RTC Lithium battery
- UEFI BIOS with watchdog timer (255 levels), Wake-on-LAN (WoL) support
- Power Supply
- 12V via 2-pin Phoenix connector or optional lockable DC jack; AT/ATX support;
- 9V to 36V via optional DC-to-DC converter
- Power Consumption – Intel Core Ultra 7 Processor 255U, 32GB LPDDR5
- 2.85A @ +12V (Typical)
- 6.96A @ +12V (Max)
- 2.85A @ +12V (Typical)
- Dimensions – 100 x 72mm (Pico-ITX form factor)
- Weight – 80 grams
- Temperature Range – Operating – 0°C ~ 60°C, Storage – -40°C ~ 85°C
- Humidity – 0% ~ 90% relative humidity, non-condensing
- MTBF – 1,063,716 hours (About 121 years)
- Certifications – CE/FCC Class A
The company provides support for Windows 10/11 64-bit and Ubuntu 22.04.2 with Linux 5.19 (TBC). The board is basically an update of the Meteor Lake-powered PICO-MTU4 SBC, or a smaller version of the AAEON GENE-ARH6 3.5-inch subcompact industrial SBC with Intel Core Ultra 200H/U Arrow Lake SoC, although only the 15W SKUs are supported, as cooling would be an issue for the 28W parts using the smaller 100x72mm Pico-ITX form factor.
AAEON says the PICO-ARU4 targets AI platforms in handheld or mobile solutions, such as portable diagnostic imaging and outdoor roadside units. The PICO-ARU4 is now in mass production, and samples are available for order on the AAEON eshop with the following options
- Core Ultra 5 Processor 225U, 16GB – $887.00
- Core Ultra 5 Processor 225U, 32GB – $988.00
- Core Ultra 7 Processor 255U, 32GB – $1,155.00
Additional information, including a datasheet, a user manual, the BIOS, and Windows & Linux drivers, may be found on the product page.


Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
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United States
Brah, at least read the posts!
[ What’s the average duty period(/hw/sw/firmware lifespan) for ‘all’ SBCs?
about 3-10yrs for average usage and demand from environment,
about 5-7yrs (harsh surroundings, usage intensity 24/7 with high loads/temperatures, dust, vibration, humidity),
about 7-15yrs for industrial grade hardware,
(datasheet Intel 80/10, iSBC, MTBF ~91,000 hours (~10.4 years), 25°C, continuously on
MTBF ≈25,006 hours (≈2.9 years), at ~55°C)?
(MTBF – 1,063,716 hours (About 121 years), talking about TPM, it’s the hardware, that limits for new Windows versions, and maybe updating to newest distributions with Linux, for longer than maybe about 25-30yrs?)
and, There’s no (standardized) interconnection between boards (cpu2cpu, memry2memry, board2board(peripherals)), except network connections, for utilizing ‘outdated’ high amounts of RAM?
Is that 850€ for an “SBC” embedded board?! And people say the Raspberry Pi is expensive…
But it haz Ultra 7 so, you know it’s a high number and ultra to boot!
HDMI 1.4?! Really?!