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17 devices found
Tiny and cheap. Runs lightweight forks only.
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Early 64-bit ARM SBC. 2GB RAM and slow storage limit it to PicoClaw and Nanobot. Cheap but dated.
The classic Pi. 1GB RAM is very tight. Only lightweight forks like PicoClaw and Nanobot are practical.
Raspberry Pi 3B form-factor alternative. 2GB RAM. Budget SBC for lightweight forks.
Budget ARM SBC from Pine64. 4GB RAM is enough for lightweight forks. Decent community support.
Affordable RISC-V SBC with 8GB RAM. PicoClaw runs natively on RISC-V. OpenClaw works but slower than ARM equivalents.
The baseline for running vanilla OpenClaw. Tight but workable.
Industrial-grade SBC with real-time PRU co-processors. Only 512MB RAM limits it to lightweight forks.
StarFive's flagship RISC-V SBC. NVMe support is a nice touch. 8GB RAM is enough for OpenClaw if you're patient with RISC-V performance.
Pi 4 in a keyboard form factor. 4GB RAM handles mid-tier forks. Neat self-contained package for a desk setup.
Pine64's RISC-V board with 8GB RAM. Good PicoClaw target. OpenClaw works but RISC-V software ecosystem is still maturing.
Hardkernel's fastest Amlogic SBC. 4GB RAM handles lightweight forks well. Rock-solid stability and mainline Linux support.
Powerful ARM SBC with RK3588S. Better CPU performance than Raspberry Pi 5. NPU for AI inference.
ASUS-quality SBC with RK3399. 4GB RAM and good I/O. Reliable but older chip compared to RK3588 boards.
Google's Edge TPU board for ML inference. 4GB RAM handles lightweight forks. TPU accelerates specific model architectures.
Industrial AI SBC with 8 TOPS of neural network acceleration. 4GB RAM supports mid-tier forks. Serious edge AI platform.
Tiny RISC-V SBC. Can run PicoClaw.