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Under normal circumstances, you can expect to pay around $60 for the Odroid-XU4, but prices have surged considerably in the wake of the pandemic as of late. Securing a dongle and popping it into one of the USB ports is an easy fix, but priced higher than the Pi 4, it’s an omission that does drag down the overall offering of the Odroid-XU4.
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Unlike the Raspberry Pi 4, the Odroid-XU4 foregoes wireless functionality with no Wi-Fi or Bluetooth connectivity. In action, all these parts combine to deliver excellent data transfer speeds, fast booting, smooth web browsing, and even good gaming performance. The Odroid-XU4 features a Samsung Exynos 5422 CPU that pushes speeds of 2 GHz on its four Cortex-A15 and 1.4 GHz on its four Cortex-A7, 2 GB of LPDDR3 RAM, a Mali-T628 GPU, two USB 3.0 ports, one USB 2.0 port, an Gigabit Ethernet port, one HDMI 1.4a port, MicroSD card slot (up to 128 GB) and an eMMC 5.0 HS400 interface up to 64 GB (much speedier than the SD Card tooling on the Pi). Overall, it’s a powerful single-board computer with a low power draw suited to a good selection of open-source operating systems such as Linux and Android. It more or less adopts the form factor of the Pi while implementing some higher specifications in some areas and opting for lesser components in others. A long-time rival of the Raspberry Pi, the Odroid-XU4 makes our list as one of the best alternatives on the market today.