We are all familiar enough by now with the succession of boards that have come from Raspberry Pi in Cambridge over the years, and when a new one comes out we’ve got a pretty good idea what ...
The Raspberry Pi has been very popular among hobbyists and educators ever since its launch in 2011. The Raspberry Pi is a credit-card-sized single-board computer with a Broadcom BCM 2835 SoC, 256MB to ...
As many suspected would eventually happen, the folks at the Raspberry Pi Foundation have taken its Raspberry Pi 4 Model B and are now offering it as a more compact Compute Module. The new Raspberry Pi ...
In a nutshell: Raspberry Pi has been offering its single-board computing devices in a flexible, extremely compact form factor since 2014. It has updated the latest iteration of these Compute Modules ...
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module is getting a big upgrade, with the same processor used in the recently released Raspberry Pi 3. The Compute Module, which is intended for industrial applications, was ...
Orange Pi boards often beat Raspberry Pi on specs, but the Raspberry Pi’s software, docs, and community make it the one I ...
Raspberry Pi cluster computers are old hat by now, and much to our dismay, we’ve even seen Raspberry Pis crop up as the brains of a few ill-conceived Kickstarter projects. The Pi was never meant for ...
Processing come from a Broadcom BCM2712 with four 2.4GHz Cortex-A76 cores. All connections to Compute Modules are via two high in count connectors – there are no ‘standard’ interface connectors. There ...
Whenever the Raspberry Pi Foundation releases a new version of the Raspberry Pi single-board computer, it's followed by a Compute Module intended for use as an embedded computer in other products. The ...