Ezurio Tungsten 510 and Tungsten 700 SMARC 2.1 compliant system-on-module powered by MediaTek Genio 510 hexa-core and Genio 700 octa-core Cortex-A78/A55 AIoT SoCs with an up to 4 TOPS NPU.
The SMARC modules feature 4GB or 8GB LPDDR4 memory and 16GB flash by default (upgradeable up to 128GB), offer dual Gigabit Ethernet, WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity, and various interfaces exposed through a standard 314-pin MXM connector, including HDMI, DisplayPort, eDP, and MIPI DSI display interfaces, two MIPI CSI camera interfaces, two I2S audio interface, PCIe Gen2 x1, and more.
Ezurio Tungsten 510/700 specifications:
- SoC (one or the other)
- MediaTek Genio 510 (MT8370)
- CPU – Hexa-core processor with 2x Arm Cortex-A78 core up to 2.2 GHz, 4x Cortex-A55 cores up to 2 GHz
- GPU – Arm Mali-G57 MC2 GPU
- VPU – 4Kp60 H.265, AV1, VP9, H.264 video decoding, 4Kp30 H.265 and H.264 video encoding
- Accelerators – Up to 3.2 TOPS AI accelerator, HiFi5 audio DSP
- MediaTek Genio 700 (MT8390)
- CPU – Octa-core processor with 2x Arm Cortex-A78 core up to 2.2 GHz, 6x Cortex-A55 cores up to 2 GHz
- GPU – Arm Mali-G57 MC3 GPU up to 950 MHz
- VPU – 4Kp75 H.265, AV1, VP9, H.264 video decoding, 4Kp30 H.265 and H.264 video encoding
- Accelerator – Up to 4.0 TOPS AI accelerator, HiFi 5 audio DSP
- MediaTek Genio 510 (MT8370)
- System Memory – 4GB or 8GB LPDDR4-3200
- Storage – 16GB eMMC 5.1 flash with HS400 speed (up to 128GB)
- Networking
- KZS9031 Gigabit Ethernet controller (RGMII)
- LAN8750 USB 2.0 “Gigabit” Ethernet controller (so limited to around 400 Mbps)
- Sona MT320 module based on MT7921 WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 chipset
- 314-pin MXM edge connector
- Storage – 4-bit SDIO
- Display
- HDMI 2.0b up to 4Kp60
- DisplayPort 1.4 up to 4K60 (10-bit)
- embedded DisplayPort 1.2 interface up to 1920×1440 @ 60Hz
- 2x 4-lane MIPI DSI interfaces (one DSI multiplexed with eDP)
- Camera
- 2x 4-lane MIPI CSI interfaces
- Single camera: 32MP @ 30fps
- Dual camera: 16MP + 16MP @ 30fps
- Video High Dynamic Range (HDR) with stagger HDR sensor: up to 16 MP at 30 fps
- Audio – 2x I2S interfaces
- Networking – 2x Gigabit Ethernet interfaces
- USB – 2x USB 3.0, 2x USB 2.0, 1x USB 2.0 OTG
- PCIe – PCIe Gen2 x1
- Low-speed I/Os – 3x UART, 5x I2C, 3x SPI
- Debug Interface – JTAG connector
- Security – Arm TrustZone
- Misc – 2x MHF4 connectors: main antenna for Wi-Fi and BT; aux antenna for Wi-Fi only
- Power Supply
- 5V via edge connector
- MT6319 + MT6365 PMICs
- Dimensions – 82 x 50 (SMARC 2.1 form factor)
- Temperature Range – Commercial: 0°C to +70°C; industrial: -40°C to +85°C

The company provides support for Android, Yocto Linux, and Buildroot Linux, as well as Zephyr RTOS and FreeRTOS. The modules were introduced a few months ago, but I found the Genio 510/700 SoM in the recent Linux 7.0 release, meaning it’s supported, at least partially, in mainline Linux. You’ll find hardware and software documentation on the support website.
Ezurio also provides a “Universal SMARC Carrier Board” called “SMARC_CAR_BRD” providing access to all I/Os from the system-on-module, including the display and dual GbE interfaces. The company also offers a kit with antennas, a power supply, and a DB9 cable.

It’s not quite the first SMARC system-on-module based on the MediaTek Genio 510/700 SoCs, but the Tungsten 510/700 provides an alternative to products such as the SECO SOM-SMARC-Genio500/SOM-SMARC-Genio700 and VIA SOM-5000, and a range of other Genio SoMs in different form factors.
The Ezurio Tungsten 510 SoM starts at $148.21 per unit for 1K orders (4GB RAM, 16GB flash, no wireless, commercial-grade variant), and the Tungsten 700 SoM at $178.46 in the same configuration, but the company mentions the modules can be sold for as low as $79 and $96, I assume in higher quantities. The SMARC_CAR kit goes for $219 without a module. More details 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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Arg. I’ve just noticed I wrote about the Tungsten700 (no spaces) when it was still from Laird, and the company hadn’t been acquired by Ezurio…
https://www.cnx-software.com/2023/07/28/tungsten700-smarc-som-and-devkit-features-mediatek-genio-700-aiot-processor/
At least, there’s a bit more information about the software now.
And you got a price now.