The recommended image for most of Olimex-made Linux boards is Olimage Linux, you can find information about it in the document here: 6.10 How to add STK1160 video capture driver support in Kernel 3.4.6.9 How to edit board configurations and definitions in the official Debian Linux?.I also can't access the local Ethernet network. 6.8 I don't have neither serial cable, nor HDMI monitor.6.7 How do I write the official Android image to a micro SD card for my A20 board?.6.6 How to download new Android image to the NAND memory of my A20 board?.6.4 How to detect and enable the Ethernet controller (if it is disabled by default)?.6.3 Is it possible to boot Debian from NAND? Do you provide such image?.6.2 How to connect a display and adjust the video output resolution?.6.1 How to generate boot-able SD-card Debian Linux image for A20-OLinuXino-LIME?. 5.4 Add Voice to your OLinuXino project.5V input power supply, noise immune design.2 BUTTONS with ANDROID functionality + RESET button.2KB EEPROM for MAC address storage and more.DEBUG-UART connector for console debug with USB-SERIAL-CABLE-F.LCD connector compatible with with 4.3", 7.0", 10.1" LCD modules from Olimex.LiPo Battery connector with battery-charging capabilities.USB-OTG with power control and current limiter.2x USB Low-Full-High-Speed hosts with power control and current limiter.A20 Cortex-A7 dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 CPU and dual-core Mali 400 GPU. Additionally, pinout tables, GPIO maps, etc released for A10-OLinuXino-LIME would apply to A20-OLinuXino-LIME This resemblance to other designs definitely might speed the development on the board - a lot of software written for A20-OLinuXino-MICRO might work out-of-the-box with A20-OLinuXino-LIME. Because of the processor, software-wise the board is closer to A20-OLinuXino-MICRO than to the A10-OLinuXino-LIME. The A10 and the A20 processors are pin-to-pin compatible. A20-OLinuXino-LIME looks identical to A10-OLinuXino-LIME, except for the more powerful A20 processor.
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