Close Menu
Cubox-iCubox-i
  • Homepage
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Cubox
  • News
  • Technology
What's Hot

Utah Medical Board Suspends State’s AI Doctor Experiment After Misdiagnosis Scare

June 5, 2026

The ARM Mini Computer That Ships With Full Industrial Certifications and Fits in the Palm of Your Hand

June 5, 2026

Tesla’s Dojo vs. The Cloud: A Divergent Strategy in the AI Hardware Race

June 5, 2026
Cubox-iCubox-i
Subscribe
  • Homepage
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Cubox
  • News
  • Technology
Cubox-iCubox-i
Home»Cubox»Meet the CuBox-M: The Two-Inch PC Built for the Next Generation of Makers
Cubox

Meet the CuBox-M: The Two-Inch PC Built for the Next Generation of Makers

Blaze WoodardBy Blaze WoodardApril 25, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

When a small hardware company places something genuinely strange on a table at a trade show, you notice a certain kind of excitement. Engineers bend over. Phones emerge. It’s easy to understand why the CuBox-M, a new two-inch cube from Israel-based SolidRun, has been receiving such attention. It appears to be a paperweight. It uses models for machine learning.

Although SolidRun isn’t well-known, the company has been discreetly supplying specialized hardware for years in the field of single-board computers and embedded systems. The CuBox line has been around for more than ten years, and this newest model gives the impression that the team has been honing the same idea repeatedly in an effort to package serious silicon into something that doesn’t appear to be a science project. The CuBox-M, which is based on NXP’s i.MX 8M Plus system-on-module, fits into a more subdued trend in the maker scene, where developers are becoming weary of bare boards fastened to desks using electrical tape.

InformationDetails
Product NameCuBox-M Micro Desktop PC
ManufacturerSolidRun (Israel-based)
Starting Price$99
ProcessorNXP i.MX 8M Plus, Quad-core Arm Cortex A53 up to 1.8GHz
Co-processorCortex M7 + Cadence Tensilica HiFi 4 DSP
AI AccelerationIntegrated NPU, 2.3 TOPS
RAM4GB LPDDR4-4000 standard, configurable up to 8GB
Storage8GB onboard eMMC + microSD slot
Dimensions50 x 50 x 50mm (two inches per side)
Ports1x HDMI 2.0, 2x USB 3.0, 1x microUSB, Gigabit Ethernet
Wireless802.11 ac/a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 5.0
Power12V DC, optional Power-over-Ethernet
CoolingFanless, silent operation
OS SupportLinux Kernel 4.9+, Android 11
Use CasesEdge AI, smart home hubs, digital signage, kiosks
Launch StatusAvailable for order

As is always the case with embedded specifications, the specifications are modest on paper. Tensilica HiFi 4 DSP for voice tasks, an integrated neural processing unit pushing 2.3 TOPS, a quad-core Cortex A53 operating at up to 1.8GHz, and a Cortex M7 in addition to it. The maximum RAM capacity is 8GB, but most prototyping tasks can be completed with just 4GB. When the 8GB of eMMC storage on board runs out, a microSD slot is hidden around the back. By all standards, it is a sufficient computer for a great deal of actual work.

The silicon isn’t really what distinguishes the CuBox-M from a Jetson Nano or Raspberry Pi. It’s true. Fanless, silent, and strangely satisfying to hold, SolidRun ships the item pre-housed in a clean plastic enclosure. It has a subtle echo of the Rubik’s Cube that anyone over 35 will recognize right away, giving it an almost retro feel. While bare boards can be charming, a polished two-inch cube conveys seriousness in a way that exposed copper traces could never convey to a developer attempting to demonstrate an edge inference model to a client.

Meet the CuBox-M
Meet the CuBox-M

In the launch announcement, SolidRun’s chief systems architect, Jon Nettleton, made the appeal quite clear. According to him, sometimes a developer simply wants a simplified system for testing. It’s a minor remark, but it makes an impact. Finding a compatible cooler and wrestling a Raspberry Pi 5 into a third-party case over the course of a weekend is a familiar experience. The CuBox-M provides a substitute. You can create a functional development platform by plugging in a single Ethernet cable that can carry both power and data, attaching an HDMI display, and connecting a USB camera.

It’s still unclear if the CuBox-M will find a true audience. Despite rising Pi prices and stock fluctuations, the maker community’s famed loyalty to the Raspberry Pi ecosystem has proven difficult to break. SolidRun is wagering that a portion of developers—those who create digital signage, smart kiosks, and vision processing systems—will pay $99 or more for something more sophisticated. It’s a fair wager. There’s a sense that the maker scene is gradually evolving and that something a little more tidy may be replacing the days of duct-taped prototypes.

The CuBox-M currently occupies that intriguing space between product and hobby. Tiny enough to blend in with a desk. capable enough to be significant.

Meet the CuBox-M
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleInside the Server Room: Discovering the Most Used OS on Servers Today
Next Article Apple’s Hidden Server Farm: The Secret Hardware Powering Private Cloud Compute
Blaze Woodard

    Blaze Woodard, an editor at cubox-i.com, is presently working as an intern at a Silicon Valley technology company while majoring in politics at the University of Kansas. Blaze, who identifies as both a policy thinker and a self-described tech geek, offers a viewpoint on hardware and computing coverage that few editors in this field can match: the capacity to relate the workings of a circuit board to the larger political, regulatory, and social forces influencing the technology sector. Even though her academic path led her to political science, her early fascination with technology persisted. She writes about computing, AI, and hardware with the zeal of someone who truly loves the subject, not as someone assigned to cover it. Blaze plays soccer and spends her free time with friends and living her life, which is exactly what a college student should do outside of the office and newsroom.

    Related Posts

    The Micro-PC Wars: CuBox vs. Raspberry Pi in the Battle for the Edge

    June 5, 2026

    The ARM Server Revolution Is Coming — and the CuBox-i Ecosystem Is Already Ahead of the Curve

    June 4, 2026

    The CuBox-i Review That Changed How One American Developer Thinks About Embedded Computing

    June 1, 2026

    Why Stanford Researchers Are Using CuBox Clusters to Train Neural Networks

    June 1, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Don't Miss
    AI

    Utah Medical Board Suspends State’s AI Doctor Experiment After Misdiagnosis Scare

    By Blaze WoodardJune 5, 20260

    Someone made a choice somewhere in the offices of the Utah Department of Commerce that…

    The ARM Mini Computer That Ships With Full Industrial Certifications and Fits in the Palm of Your Hand

    June 5, 2026

    Tesla’s Dojo vs. The Cloud: A Divergent Strategy in the AI Hardware Race

    June 5, 2026

    The Day the Encryption Broke: Why Cybersecurity’s ‘Q-Day’ Is Closer Than You Think

    June 5, 2026

    The Micro-PC Wars: CuBox vs. Raspberry Pi in the Battle for the Edge

    June 5, 2026

    The Dark Side of the AI Hardware Boom: E-Waste and the ITAD Sector’s Nightmare

    June 5, 2026

    The Data Center Dilemma: As AI Hardware Heats Up, Power Grids Feel the Strain

    June 5, 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Cubox-i.com is an independent technology publication that focuses on edge AI, industrial hardware, compact ARM computing, and the wider field of technology news that is important to engineers, developers, manufacturers, and knowledgeable readers in the US and abroad.

    Our Picks

    Utah Medical Board Suspends State’s AI Doctor Experiment After Misdiagnosis Scare

    June 5, 2026

    The ARM Mini Computer That Ships With Full Industrial Certifications and Fits in the Palm of Your Hand

    June 5, 2026

    Tesla’s Dojo vs. The Cloud: A Divergent Strategy in the AI Hardware Race

    June 5, 2026
    Dsclaimer

    Cubox-i.com publishes content about markets, finance, investments, and economic issues solely for educational and informational purposes. It’s not financial guidance. Opinion pieces and analysis from independent industry leaders and commentators are regularly published by us; however, these viewpoints are presented as those of the contributors and do not represent cubox-i.com’s recommendations.

    We’re It is highly advised that readers consult a qualified, licensed financial advisor before making any financial decisions based on information found on this website, including purchasing, selling, or holding any investment, asset, or financial product.

    • Homepage
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • Disclaimer
    • About Us
    • Cubox
    • News
    • Technology
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.