Crowdfunding Spotlight: The Firefly RK3399


Hey there, welcome back to the Crowdfunding Spotlight. In case you need a refresher, this is where we we examine and write about any interesting, useful or just peculiar crowdfunding projects from China. Today’s project is a rather interesting one, as it’s focused more towards the development side of Android. Today, we’ll be taking a look at Firefly’s RK3399 development board.

But before we take a look at that, feel free to check out the previous entries in the series. Maybe one of them will pique your curiosity, though there’s still only one.

Previously on Crowdfunding Spotlight: Insta360 Air

The company behind the RK3399 development board is Firefly. Firefly has been making Rockchip development boards for a while now, and their RK3288 development boards are still available for sale on multiple different websites. Aside from that, they’ve also got the FirePrime, which is an older board that is tougher to find in stock.

Their previous board, the Firefly RK3288

Development boards are basically what they sound like. They’re boards that are fully open for developers to work on that feature different chipsets. A good example of this would be Firefly’s own RK3288 development board, or the Helio X20 boards by 96board. While talking about devices like these, it’s impossible to not get a little technical, so let’s take a look at the specs.

Firefly-RK3399 board specifications:-

  • SoC – Rockchip RK3399 hexa-core big.LITTLE processor with dual core ARM Cortex A72 up to 2.0 GHz and quad core Cortex A53 processor with ARM Mali-T860 MP4 GPU with OpenGL 1.1 to 3.1 support, OpenVG1.1, OpenCL and DX 11 support
  • System Memory
    • Standard – 2 GB DDR3
    • Plus devkit – 4 GB DDR3
  • Storage
    • Standard – 16 GB eMMC flash, micro SD card, M.2 socket
    • Plus devkit – 32 GB eMMC flash, micro SD card, M.2 socket
  • Video Output & Display Interfaces
    • 1x HDMI 2.0 up to 4K @ 60 Hz
    • 1x DisplayPort (DP) 1.2 interface up to 4K @ 60Hz (via USB type C connector)
    • 1x eDP 1.3 (4-lanes @ 10.8 Gbps)
    • 1x MIPI DSI interface up to 2560×1600 @ 60 Hz
  • Video Decode – 4K VP9 and 10-bit H.265 video codec support up to 60 fps
  • Audio
    • Via HDMI or DisplayPort
    • 3.5mm headphone jack with stereo audio output and mic input
    • optical S/PDIF
    • 1x LINE Out and 1x speaker via GPIO header; Speaker: 1.5W or 2.5 W per channel for respectively 8Ω or 4Ω speakers
    • Built-in microphone
    • I2S output and input interface up to 8 channels
  • Connectivity – Gigabit Ethernet (RJ45) port using RTL8211E transceiver, WiFi 802.11ac 2×2 MIMO and Bluetooth 4.1 (AP6354 module)
  • USB – 2x USB 2.0 host ports, 1x USB 3.0 port, 1x USB 3.0 type C port
  • Camera
    • 2x MIPI CSI interfaces up to 13MP or 2x 8MP
    • 1x DVP camera interface up to 5MP
  • Debugging – 3-pin serial header
  • Expansion
    • 42-pin GPIO female header with access to 1x I2S, 2x ADC, 2x I2C, 1x SPI, 2x GPIO, 1x LINEOUT, 1x SPEAKER
    • 1x mini PCIe for LTE, 1x PCIe 2.1 M.2 slot B-key (2x PCIe, SATA, USB 2.0, USB 3.0, HSIC, SSIC, Audio, UIM, I2C)
    • SIM card slot
  • Misc – RTC battery header; power & user LEDs; power, reset and recovery buttons; IR receiver
  • Power Supply – 12V/2A DC (5.5×2.1mm barrel connector)
  • Dimensions – 12.4 x 9.3 mm (8-layer PCB)
  • Weight – Board: 89 grams; board + cooling fan and heatsink: 120 grams
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Given the six 64-bit ARM cores and 2+ GB of RAM along with the Mali-T864MP for graphics, the specs are fairly decent and the pricing isn’t bad for being much more powerful than Raspberry Pi like boards. The board supports Ubuntu 16.04 and Android 6.0, and performance for both seems to be pretty satisfactory.

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What’s great about this board is that Firefly has an open community similar to Raspberry Pi’s where you can find documentation, source codes, tools and firmware for your board. This makes things like actual usage and development much simpler and easier.

The device is also rich in I/O, as it includes HDMI 2.0, PCI Express M.2, DP 1.2, eDP, USB 3.0, and more. Storage varies from 16GB eMMC and 2GB of RAM for the standard and can go up to 4GB of RAM and 128GB eMMC for the plus devkit. There’s even a sim slot for LTE, which could make this thing a great portable media player.

Interestingly, there’s also support for dual cameras, an nice extra if you’re looking to implement dual camera functionality in your apps. This apparently allows for panoramic shots, gesture detection, depth mapping, 3D videos, and “other computer vision applications”, whatever those may be.

Pricing starts out at $139 for the base model while the more expensive Plus devkit starts at $199. These prices are actually quite decent for a Cortex-A72 board as the only other similar board is 96board’s Helio X20, and that one’s more expensive and tough to find. The company ships the devices all over the world, so that’s not much of an issue.

If you’re looking to learn how to develop for Android or you’re simply curious, this is a pretty good board to start with. The board is more expensive than some, but it’s also much more well equipped out of the box. They’ve currently managed to gain $43,668 of their pledged goal of $50,000, and they’ve 16 days left to fulfill that gap.

Delivery is expected to be in March, though if you know crowdfunding projects, you know that the projected date is rarely accurate. We wouldn’t be surprised if you received it later in April or May, perhaps even July. If you’re interested, you can check out the crowdfunding page here, or you can peruse Firefly’s website over here.

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2 Comments

  1. Lazar Prodanovic
    December 24, 2016

    Well price is far from good but it still isn’t outrageous considering similar products & I am certain that their will meet the founding goals. Problem of this product is that it is drifting in the space with missed main goal. It is much more fancy toy then serious development bord. What makes it a miss as a development bord is rather bad & hardly usable state of open source Mali GPU drivers & things can get stuck when you have to rely upon binary blobs which lacks functionality you particularly need & you cannot do anything about it. On the other side of the glass it’s rip will be numerous TV boxes that will come with the same SoC & probably lower price tag.

  2. Lazar Prodanovic
    December 24, 2016

    Well price is far from good but it still isn’t outrageous considering similar products & I am certain that their will meet the founding goals. Problem of this product is that it is drifting in the space with missed main goal. It is much more fancy toy then serious development bord. What makes it a miss as a development bord is rather bad & hardly usable state of open source Mali GPU drivers & things can get stuck when you have to rely upon binary blobs which lacks functionality you particularly need & you cannot do anything about it. On the other side of the glass it’s rip will be numerous TV boxes that will come with the same SoC & probably lower price tag.