This thread is a good example of how NOT to go about FPGA project. What you should do is determine approximately how much of FPGA resources (LUTs, FFs, memory, DSP, etc.) your design will need, and only then proceed with selecting device and a board, instead of picking up a random board and trying to cram you design into it somehow. You've got to remember that FPGA and devboard is just a tool, so you pick the right tool for the job, and not take out a random tool and then try to use it for everything you can think of.