Hi everyone,

I'm Dima (more info about me at dimakrasner.com) and I'm new here, so ... hi.

For years I've been following the ARM scene, since I'm very interested in libre 
hardware projects.

Chinese ARM netbooks with WonerMedia chips (8850, 8880, etc') are very common 
in sites like AliExpress and Ebay and they're pretty darn cheap. Performance, 
RAM amount limit and decoder performance should be reasonable, compared to 
other cheap ARM boards.

I see the WM8950 has been evaluated, but the wiki doesn't say what's wrong with 
it. As far as I can tell it's yet another Mali-400 board.

Upstream kernel has partial support for newer WonderMedia chips, but there is a 
small community at 
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/vt8500-wm8505-linux-kernel and as far 
as I know older ones (like the 8650) should work to some degree with current 
upstream kernels, some rotten code floating around multiple kernel trees needs 
to be upstreamed (possibly, after refactoring) and there is an old, public 
U-boot fork, at least for the 8650.

As far as I see, these are technical ecosystem issues that can be solved by a 
small group of volunteers with kernel, upstreaming and embedded development 
experience, even without any vendor support. Therefore, if the 8650 still under 
mass production, it could be an EOMA68 candidate.

Although I understand while the A20 is preferred to WonderMedia chips (it makes 
life easier on the software front, probably more than any other non-x86 SoC), I 
wonder, what makes them unacceptable in RYF hardware? Is there any technical 
issue that I've missed?

Cheers,
Dima

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