
The solution brings enterprise‑grade networking, power‑over‑Ethernet and high‑speed storage to the low‑cost Raspberry Pi platform, unlocking new edge‑compute and IoT deployments.
Edge computing continues to migrate toward compact, low‑cost hardware that can still meet demanding network and storage requirements. The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5, already praised for its ARM Cortex‑A76 cores and flexible I/O, now gains a dedicated carrier board that adds eight PoE+ ports and a 2.5 GbE WAN interface. This combination reduces the need for separate switches and power injectors, simplifying deployments in smart‑city sensors, retail kiosks, and remote monitoring stations where power and bandwidth are at a premium.
Exaviz’s Cruiser series differentiates itself through modularity. The flagship Cruiser model supplies eight Gigabit PoE+ ports, while the Cruiser Lite halves the PoE count for cost‑sensitive projects, and the Cruiser Keel removes PoE altogether for pure data‑center or lab use. All variants retain NVMe support, enabling fast local caching or edge analytics, and dual HDMI outputs for multi‑display signage. The inclusion of an ESP32‑C6 wireless module adds Wi‑Fi 6 and BLE 5.2, ensuring connectivity redundancy. The accompanying bent‑steel case, engineered with dual 40 mm fans and a front‑panel USB 3.0 port, provides robust thermal management and easy access to storage bays, making the solution ready for 24/7 operation.
Pricing the carrier board at $89 (regular $99) and the case at $119 (regular $129) positions the Cruiser as a competitive alternative to traditional industrial switches that often exceed $300. By bundling PoE, high‑speed Ethernet, and NVMe into a single, Raspberry‑Pi‑compatible package, Exaviz lowers the total cost of ownership for developers and system integrators. As edge workloads demand more compute and storage at the source, the Cruiser’s early‑2026 availability could accelerate adoption of Pi‑based gateways across telecom, logistics, and AI‑enabled surveillance markets.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...