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Making the most from the Intel Compute Stick Roadmap

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When Intel's first Compute Stick loaded with Ubuntu (STCK1A8LFC) was released in late April 2015 the RRP was around $110. Recently it has been advertised at less than half that and even as low as $49.99. However when I looked at Intel's ARK website to check the EOL under 'Expected Discontinuance' it said 'See Roadmap':


As I was unable to track down this document anywhere on their website I contacted Intel who confirmed that the STCK1A8LFC model was indeed EOL and provided the following roadmap:


The map is useful for showing the current product lifecycles but unlike the 'leaked' roadmap of last year it does not give any indication of things to come. So I asked what was planned but all Intel indicated was that they are exploring an Apollo Lake compute stick as well as more Core-based compute sticks in 2017.

Since the STCK1A8LFC came to market with Ubuntu 14.04 a new LTS Ubuntu has been released: 16.04. Whilst 14.04 is also a LTS release, the official supported version for the Intel Compute Stick is restricted to using the 3.16 kernel due to enabling HDMI audio, bluetooth and wifi. It is also limited to just Ubuntu rather than other flavours like Lubuntu, a fast and lightweight version whose core is based on Linux and Ubuntu but uses the minimal desktop LXDE and a selection of light applications.


To address this I've already created ISO images specifically to work on the Intel Compute Stick with the latest 16.04 release by patching Canonical's kernel source to fully support the hardware (see here).

But as Lubuntu Yakkety Yak Alpha 1 (soon to be 16.10) has just been released I decided to also create a version suitable for Intel Compute Sticks. It can be downloaded from https://goo.gl/2m1CJh and used as LiveUSB or it can be installed (but must be connected to the Internet during installation at this stage).

The STCK1A8LFC only has 1GB RAM and 8GB storage but once Lubuntu is installed you get a really good cheap mini PC stick. Other applications can easily be installed to provide extra functionality and adding Kodi makes for quite a usable HTPC.

For example in the following video I demonstrate a brief overview of Lubuntu installed on a STCK1A8LFC which includes a mounted 64GB micro SD card and then show some examples of using Kodi to run videos from both YouTube and from the micro SD card. I also show running Octane 2 on Chrome and a YouTube 1080p video.


Looking at the Intel Compute Stick roadmap shows the availability of the STCK1A8LFC is most likely limited to existing stocks. So while the STCK1A8LFC is cheap now it probably won't last meaning the cheapest Intel Compute Stick to run Ubuntu on is about to change.


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