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Indulge in the rich flavors of our homemade Blackberry and Raspberry Jam! Perfect for spreading on toast or adding to your favorite desserts. www.fabfood4all.co.uk/blackberry-and-raspberry... #Jam #JamMaking #Raspberry #Blackberry

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3 ways a Raspberry Pi can cut your utility bills A device that keeps saving you money after you buy it. Not only is the Raspberry Pi a cheap and good purchase, but it can even help you save even mo...

#Single-Board #Computers #Raspberry #Pi #Servers #PC #Optimization

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I turned my living room into a Raspberry Pi-flavored arcade without storing a single game locally I set up a living room console with Batocera, and all my games are streamed from my NAS Over the ye...

#Linux #Raspberry #Pi

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The Smallest Dialup ISP Is A Raspberry Pi And A Prison Phone There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more than one. Some of those have survived broadband, but none of them were as small as [Jeff Geerling]’s Pi ISP — a tiny dialup ISP built so his Aunt’s old G3 MacBook can get online at 36kbps, as God and [Robert Khan] intended. Hardware-wise, the Raspberry Pi is at one end of the chain, and your retrocomputer at another. In between, you’ll have a USB modem plugged into the Pi, and a device called a “two-way line simulator” to create a dial tone for that plain-old-telephone goodness. [Jeff] notes that these were commonly used in prisons for the phones that visitors use to talk to inmates. Of course, since these devices are designed strictly for voice transmissions, which POTS was built for, you’re not going to get over 36 kbps, and that’s even with high-quality gear. The cheaper options might drop you down to 28k… just like with an ISP back in the day. ‘You get what you pay for’ is very rarely false. Now, you can use this technology to just connect two computers together — as we’ve featured previously — but [Jeff] has gone the extra mile to put together, via Ansible, an easy-to-install software package that will let the Raspberry Pi act just like your ISP’s servers once did, and connect you to that series of tubes once called the World Wide Web. Of course, the World Wide Web isn’t built for dial-up anymore, so you’re going to be waiting… a while. Hackaday’s front page isn’t especially heavy, weighing about 4MB at the time of this writing, but that’s 15 minutes of load time, and you still aren’t reading the articles. You also won’t be able to access much on old machines that can’t do HTTPS, but [Jeff] thought of that and bundles [rdmark]’s MacProxyClassic to translate the modern web into HTML tags that Netscape can understand and serve them over HTTP. You’ll still be waiting for our modern bloat, but perhaps not quite so long. If you want the “authentic” dial-up experience, you’ll need to see the lightweight webpages of Yesteryear, and MacProxyClassic contains a Wayback Machine extension for that purpose. We featured a similar project a while back that did that, but without all the joys of dial-up. Now get off the computer, we’re expecting a call!

The Smallest Dialup ISP is a Raspberry Pi and a Prison Phone There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more tha...

#Retrocomputing #dial #up #internet #isp #pots #raspberry #pi

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The Smallest Dialup ISP Is A Raspberry Pi And A Prison Phone There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more than one. Some of those have survived broadband, but none of them were as small as [Jeff Geerling]’s Pi ISP — a tiny dialup ISP built so his Aunt’s old G3 MacBook can get online at 36kbps, as God and [Robert Khan] intended. Hardware-wise, the Raspberry Pi is at one end of the chain, and your retrocomputer at another. In between, you’ll have a USB modem plugged into the Pi, and a device called a “two-way line simulator” to create a dial tone for that plain-old-telephone goodness. [Jeff] notes that these were commonly used in prisons for the phones that visitors use to talk to inmates. Of course, since these devices are designed strictly for voice transmissions, which POTS was built for, you’re not going to get over 36 kbps, and that’s even with high-quality gear. The cheaper options might drop you down to 28k… just like with an ISP back in the day. ‘You get what you pay for’ is very rarely false. Now, you can use this technology to just connect two computers together — as we’ve featured previously — but [Jeff] has gone the extra mile to put together, via Ansible, an easy-to-install software package that will let the Raspberry Pi act just like your ISP’s servers once did, and connect you to that series of tubes once called the World Wide Web. Of course, the World Wide Web isn’t built for dial-up anymore, so you’re going to be waiting… a while. Hackaday’s front page isn’t especially heavy, weighing about 4MB at the time of this writing, but that’s 15 minutes of load time, and you still aren’t reading the articles. You also won’t be able to access much on old machines that can’t do HTTPS, but [Jeff] thought of that and bundles [rdmark]’s MacProxyClassic to translate the modern web into HTML tags that Netscape can understand and serve them over HTTP. You’ll still be waiting for our modern bloat, but perhaps not quite so long. If you want the “authentic” dial-up experience, you’ll need to see the lightweight webpages of Yesteryear, and MacProxyClassic contains a Wayback Machine extension for that purpose. We featured a similar project a while back that did that, but without all the joys of dial-up. Now get off the computer, we’re expecting a call!

The Smallest Dialup ISP is a Raspberry Pi and a Prison Phone There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more tha...

#Retrocomputing #dial #up #internet #isp #pots #raspberry #pi

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Got a Raspberry Pi Pico? Here's the first thing you should do The Pi Picos are tiny but capable, once you get used to their differences. The Raspberry Pi Pico, and its newer sibling, the Pico 2...

#Single-Board #Computers #Raspberry #Pi #DIY #Programming

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Velxio is an open-source, self-hosted Arduino, Raspberry Pi, and ESP32 simulator Velxio is an open-source, self-hosted simulator for Arduino, ESP32, and Raspberry Pi boards that works directly in y...

#Atmel #AVR #Broadcom #BCMxxxx #Espressif #Linux […]

[Original post on cnx-software.com]

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Setting up Home Assistant OS on the Raspberry Pi PiMyLifeUp shares how to set up Home Assistant OS on the Raspberry Pi. Home Assistant is an open-source home automation software with devices like t...

#Raspberry #Pi #piday #raspberry #pi

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Don’t Overspend on Raspberry Pis – Save $$$ with the Pi Zero With prices rising the value of a lower powered Pi should not be overlooked. On April 1, Eben Upton announced another round of price...

#Raspberry #Pi #piday #rasbperry #pi

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Don’t Overspend on Raspberry Pis – Save $$$ with the Pi Zero #piday #raspberrypi With prices rising the value of a lower powered Pi should not be overlooked. On April 1, Eben Upton announced an...

#Raspberry #Pi #piday #rasbperry #pi

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_ Disclosure: Some links on this page are monetized by theSkimlinks, Amazon, Rakuten Advertising, and eBay, affiliate programs, and Liliputing may earn a commission if you make a purchase after clicking on those links. All prices are subject to change, and this article only reflects the prices available at time of publication. _ The Radxa Taco is a carrier board for a Raspberry Pi Compute Module that gives you ethernet, USB, and HDMI ports plus a microSD card reader and M.2 2280 and M.2 2230 slots. But this board _also_ has SATA connectors that let your compute module to power a network-attached storage system with up to five hard drives. When Radxa first launched the Taco board in 2022 it supported the Raspberry Pi CM3 and CM4. Now the company has introduced a new model made for the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5. It’s available for pre-order for $65, but you’ll need to bring your own compute module and storage. The carrier board measures 114 x 85mm (4.5″ x 3.4″) and features five SATA connectors, status LED lights, and a boot button on one side, and most of the system’s ports and connectors on the other. Those include: * Raspberry Pi CM5 connector (2 x 100-pin) * 1 x M.2 2280 M-Key slot * 1 x M.2 2230 E-Key slot * 1 x microSD card reader * 1 x 2.5 Gigabit Ethernet * 1 x Gigabit Ethernet * 1 x HDMI 2.0 * 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (5 Gbps) * 1 x USB Type-C (for flashing system firmware) * 1 x RTC battery holder * 1 x fan connector with PWM speed control * 1 x 8-pin GPIO header * 1 x 12V DC power jack * 1 x 12V DC power header Compared with earlier versions of the board, the new model has the same basic design, but it now supports PCIe 3.0 (up from PCIe 2.0), and USB 3.2 (up from USB 2.0). _viaLinuxGizmos_ ## Support Liliputing * Liliputing provides news, reviews, commentary, and related information about compact computers including laptops, tablets, smartphones, wearables, mini PCs, and single-board computers. While Liliputing earns revenue from advertising and affiliate links (we earn a small commission if you buy something after clicking that link), the business model that this site and many others was built on may not be sustainable much longer. So if you value the work we do, please consider supporting the site. Here’s how you can do that even if you’re using an ad blocker and/or hate online shopping: * **Make a monthly contribution with Patreon** * **Make a 1-time or monthly contribution with PayPal** You can also help by spreading the word about Liliputing. Subscribe to our RSS feed, follow us on social media, or sign up for our email list, and when you find an interesting article share it with your friends! #### Subscribe by email: Subscribe

This board turns a Raspberry Pi CM5 into a NAS with support for 5 HDDs The Radxa Taco is a carrier board for a Raspberry Pi Compute Module that gives you ethernet, USB, and HDMI ports plus a microS...

#News #nofollow #cm5 #radxa #radxa #taco #raspberry #pi #cm5

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Why a Raspberry Pi is actually a terrible choice for a Plex server (and what you should use instead) Raspberry Pis are not good for absolutely everything. When you're setting up a Plex server, ...

#Single-Board #Computers #Raspberry #Pi #Plex #Servers

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Ich habe hier noch ein fast neues www.andreas-edler.de/blog/2008/07... #Medion #Akoya E1210 #Netbook mit #Raspberry OS und einen etwas jüngeren #Asus #Eee PC 1005p www.andreas-edler.de/blog/2010/01... mit #Bodhi #Linux im Regal. Ich glaube ich gebe die jetzt ins Recycling. Nehmen nur Platz weg.

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Original post on social.tchncs.de

Ich habe hier noch ein fast neues www.andreas-edler.de/blog/2008/07/laptop-medi... Medion Akoya E1210 Netbook mit Raspberry OS und einen etwas jüngeren Asus Eee PC 1005p www.andreas-edler.de/blog/2010/01/asus-eeepc-... mit Bodhi Linux im Regal und ehrlich gesagt […]

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The Raspberry Pi 4 With 3 GB RAM Is No Joke Raspberry Pi 5 price increases. (Credit: Jeff Geerling) Although easily dismissed by some as another cruel April Fools joke, Raspberry Pi’s announcement of a new 3 GB model of the Raspberry Pi 4 along with (more) price increases for other models was no joke. Courtesy of the ongoing RAMpocalypse, supplies of LPDDR4 and LPDDR5 are massively affected, leading to this new RPi 4 model with two 1.5 GB LPDDR4 chips, as these are apparently cheaper to source. Affected in this latest price increase across RP’s product range are RPi 4 and 5 models with 4 or more GB of RAM, with price bumps ranging from $25 on the low end to $150 for the Raspberry Pi 500+. If you wanted a Raspberry Pi 5 with 16 GB of RAM, you’re now paying $300 for the privilege. Obviously, this news has got people like [Jeff Geerling] rather down in the dumps, essentially stating that using SBCs like the RPi is now beyond the means of many hobbyists. While you can still use SBCs that use e.g. LPDDR2 RAM, such as the older RPi Zero, 2 and 3 models, [Jeff] himself is now moving more towards wrangling with snakes on MCUs, as these boards are so far not significantly affected in terms of price. With current projections in the RAM market being that this year will still see more price increases, it remains hard to tell exactly how ‘temporary’ this situation will be. That said, using readily available, powerful and cheap MCUs like the ESP32 variants for projects isn’t a bad idea if you really don’t need to be running more than perhaps FreeRTOS.

The Raspberry Pi 4 With 3 GB RAM is No Joke Although easily dismissed by some as another cruel April Fools joke, Raspberry Pi’s announcement of a new 3 GB model of the Raspberry Pi 4 along with (...

#News #Raspberry #Pi #raspberry #pi #Raspberry #Pi #4

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The Raspberry Pi 4 With 3 GB RAM Is No Joke Raspberry Pi 5 price increases. (Credit: Jeff Geerling) Although easily dismissed by some as another cruel April Fools joke, Raspberry Pi’s announcement of a new 3 GB model of the Raspberry Pi 4 along with (more) price increases for other models was no joke. Courtesy of the ongoing RAMpocalypse, supplies of LPDDR4 and LPDDR5 are massively affected, leading to this new RPi 4 model with two 1.5 GB LPDDR4 chips, as these are apparently cheaper to source. Affected in this latest price increase across RP’s product range are RPi 4 and 5 models with 4 or more GB of RAM, with price bumps ranging from $25 on the low end to $150 for the Raspberry Pi 500+. If you wanted a Raspberry Pi 5 with 16 GB of RAM, you’re now paying $300 for the privilege. Obviously, this news has got people like [Jeff Geerling] rather down in the dumps, essentially stating that using SBCs like the RPi is now beyond the means of many hobbyists. While you can still use SBCs that use e.g. LPDDR2 RAM, such as the older RPi Zero, 2 and 3 models, [Jeff] himself is now moving more towards wrangling with snakes on MCUs, as these boards are so far not significantly affected in terms of price. With current projections in the RAM market being that this year will still see more price increases, it remains hard to tell exactly how ‘temporary’ this situation will be. That said, using readily available, powerful and cheap MCUs like the ESP32 variants for projects isn’t a bad idea if you really don’t need to be running more than perhaps FreeRTOS.

The Raspberry Pi 4 With 3 GB RAM is No Joke Although easily dismissed by some as another cruel April Fools joke, Raspberry Pi’s announcement of a new 3 GB model of the Raspberry Pi 4 along with (...

#News #Raspberry #Pi #raspberry #pi #Raspberry #Pi #4

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Turn a Raspberry Pi CM5 into a TV stick with this carrier board Many modern TVs ships with software that will let you stream video from Netflix, YouTube, and other services. And if you’re looking...

#News #nofollow #raspberry #pi #raspberry #pi #cm5 […]

[Original post on liliputing.com]

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6 awesome ways to upcycle an old Raspberry Pi This Pi will never go bad. If you've bought a new Raspberry Pi, or just got your hands on an older model that someone else didn't want, there a...

#Single-Board #Computers #Raspberry #Pi #DIY #Homelab #Retro #Gaming

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This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally The Raspberry Pi has always been a tinkerer’s dream, a tiny board that can become almost anything with enough creativity. Over the years, its growing capabilities have attracted developers, home automation enthusiasts, and even edge AI experimenters who want real processing power in a compact, low-cost package. The persistent challenge has been housing all of that potential in something that looks and works like a proper desktop. SunFounder’s Pironman 5 Pro Max takes a direct swing at that problem. It’s a dark anodized aluminum tower case designed exclusively for the Raspberry Pi 5, surrounding it with enough hardware to make it a genuinely capable desktop machine. The case and all its bundled accessories start at $145.99 without the Pi itself, which is a lot of kit for something technically sold as a bare enclosure. Designer: SunFounder The most visible feature is the 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen on the front (or side, depending on your point of reference), giving direct, tactile access to whatever you’re running. Alongside it are a 5MP adjustable camera module, stereo speakers, a USB microphone, and a 3.5mm audio jack, all included in the box. Together, they open the door to voice interfaces, video recording, and interactive displays without requiring a single extra module or dangling cable. Storage and AI expansion come from dual NVMe M.2 slots driven by a PCIe Gen 2 switch. They support RAID 0 for speed or RAID 1 for redundancy, making the Pironman a surprisingly capable home NAS. The same slots are also compatible with Hailo-8 and Hailo-8L AI accelerators for running local language models like DeepSeek or Ollama without a cloud connection. SunFounder’s OpenClaw platform ties a lot of that together, letting you build a personal AI agent directly on the hardware. You can connect it to cloud-based services like ChatGPT and Gemini, or keep everything local with Grok, Ollama, and DeepSeek. It’s a bold pitch for a single-board computer, but one the Raspberry Pi 5’s improved architecture was quietly building toward. Cooling is managed by a PWM tower cooler with dual RGB fans, keeping the Pi 5, NVMe drives, and any attached Hailo accelerator stable under sustained load. A front-facing OLED display shows real-time CPU usage, RAM, temperature, and IP address, while a metal power button handles safe shutdowns and an RTC battery holder supports projects that can’t afford unexpected downtime. The chassis measures 140.9mm x 77.0mm x 138.7 mm and includes a GPIO extender, a spring-loaded microSD slot, rear USB 2.0 ports, and a 27W USB-C power input. It runs on Raspberry Pi OS, Ubuntu, Kali, and Homebridge OS, giving it the range to serve as a media center, development workstation, or smart home hub without needing to swap hardware between projects. For $145.99, the Pironman 5 Pro Max is selling the hardware to build a finished computer around a board that already fits in your pocket. That gap between bare single-board computer and fully equipped desktop has always been the Raspberry Pi community’s favorite problem to tackle, and few cases have gone after it with quite this much ambition. Add as a preferred source on Google ### SHARE * Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Share on X (Opens in new window) X * Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest * Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit * Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn * Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr * Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email * Print (Opens in new window) Print * More * * Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram * Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads * Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp * Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon * Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky * Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor *

This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally The Raspberry Pi has always been a tinkerer’s dream, a tiny...

#Desktops #Product #Design #case #Mini #PC #raspberry #pi

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This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally The Raspberry Pi has always been a tinkerer’s dream, a tiny board that can become almost anything with enough creativity. Over the years, its growing capabilities have attracted developers, home automation enthusiasts, and even edge AI experimenters who want real processing power in a compact, low-cost package. The persistent challenge has been housing all of that potential in something that looks and works like a proper desktop. SunFounder’s Pironman 5 Pro Max takes a direct swing at that problem. It’s a dark anodized aluminum tower case designed exclusively for the Raspberry Pi 5, surrounding it with enough hardware to make it a genuinely capable desktop machine. The case and all its bundled accessories start at $145.99 without the Pi itself, which is a lot of kit for something technically sold as a bare enclosure. Designer: SunFounder The most visible feature is the 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen on the front (or side, depending on your point of reference), giving direct, tactile access to whatever you’re running. Alongside it are a 5MP adjustable camera module, stereo speakers, a USB microphone, and a 3.5mm audio jack, all included in the box. Together, they open the door to voice interfaces, video recording, and interactive displays without requiring a single extra module or dangling cable. Storage and AI expansion come from dual NVMe M.2 slots driven by a PCIe Gen 2 switch. They support RAID 0 for speed or RAID 1 for redundancy, making the Pironman a surprisingly capable home NAS. The same slots are also compatible with Hailo-8 and Hailo-8L AI accelerators for running local language models like DeepSeek or Ollama without a cloud connection. SunFounder’s OpenClaw platform ties a lot of that together, letting you build a personal AI agent directly on the hardware. You can connect it to cloud-based services like ChatGPT and Gemini, or keep everything local with Grok, Ollama, and DeepSeek. It’s a bold pitch for a single-board computer, but one the Raspberry Pi 5’s improved architecture was quietly building toward. Cooling is managed by a PWM tower cooler with dual RGB fans, keeping the Pi 5, NVMe drives, and any attached Hailo accelerator stable under sustained load. A front-facing OLED display shows real-time CPU usage, RAM, temperature, and IP address, while a metal power button handles safe shutdowns and an RTC battery holder supports projects that can’t afford unexpected downtime. The chassis measures 140.9mm x 77.0mm x 138.7 mm and includes a GPIO extender, a spring-loaded microSD slot, rear USB 2.0 ports, and a 27W USB-C power input. It runs on Raspberry Pi OS, Ubuntu, Kali, and Homebridge OS, giving it the range to serve as a media center, development workstation, or smart home hub without needing to swap hardware between projects. For $145.99, the Pironman 5 Pro Max is selling the hardware to build a finished computer around a board that already fits in your pocket. That gap between bare single-board computer and fully equipped desktop has always been the Raspberry Pi community’s favorite problem to tackle, and few cases have gone after it with quite this much ambition. Add as a preferred source on Google ### SHARE * Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Share on X (Opens in new window) X * Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest * Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit * Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn * Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr * Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email * Print (Opens in new window) Print * More * * Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram * Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads * Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp * Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon * Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky * Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor *

This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally This $146 Raspberry Pi 5 Case Has a Touchscreen and Runs AI Locally The Raspberry Pi has always been a tinkerer’s dream, a tiny...

#Desktops #Product #Design #case #Mini #PC #raspberry #pi

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**Raspberry Pi od lat uchodzi za najtańszy komputer świata, ale ta legenda właśnie dostaje kolejny cios. Firma ogłosiła następną falę podwyżek, tłumacząc, że rynek pamięci kompletnie oszalał i nie da się już dłużej utrzymać dotychczasowych cen.** Zmiany weszły w życie 1 kwietnia, choć CEO Eben Upton podkreśla, że nie jest to żaden primaaprilisowy żart. W tym samym czasie debiutuje nowy model Raspberry Pi 4 z 3 GB RAM, wyceniony na 83,75 dolara, który pojawia się dokładnie wtedy, gdy ceny pozostałych wariantów idą w górę. ## Tanio już było. Podziękujcie AI Najważniejszy powód podwyżek jest brutalnie prosty. Cena pamięci DRAM LPDDR4, wykorzystywanej w Raspberry Pi 4 i 5, wzrosła w ciągu roku aż siedmiokrotnie. Firma przez długi czas próbowała brać te koszty na siebie, ale przy globalnym niedoborze RAM‑u nie dało się już dłużej udawać, że sytuacja jest stabilna. W rezultacie drożeją zarówno klasyczne modele, jak i moduły Compute Module. Różnice potrafią sięgać od kilkunastu do nawet stu pięćdziesięciu dolarów w najmocniejszych konfiguracjach. Zmianę odczują wszyscy, od hobbystów po firmy. Tabela podwyżek. | Źródło: Raspberry Pi W tym całym zamieszaniu pojawia się jednak kilka wyjątków. Część oferty pozostanie w dotychczasowych cenach. Modele z jednym i dwoma gigabajtami pamięci pozostają w przedziale od 35 do 65 USD, a popularny Raspberry Pi 400 wciąż kosztuje 60 dolarów. Podobnie jest ze starszymi konstrukcjami, takimi jak Zero, Zero W, Zero 2 W czy cała rodzina płytek pierwszej i trzeciej generacji. Te urządzenia korzystają ze starszej pamięci LPDDR2, której firma ma duże zapasy, więc ich ceny mogą pozostać stabilne. ## Stare ceny powrócą, choć nie wiemy kiedy Wraz z podwyżkami pojawia się też apel do użytkowników, by rozsądnie dobierali ilość pamięci do swoich projektów. Upton podkreśla, że nie każdy potrzebuje dużego zapasu RAM i że w wielu zastosowaniach tańsze warianty sprawdzą się równie dobrze. To część strategii, którą firma nazywa dopasowaniem sprzętu do realnych potrzeb. W praktyce oznacza to zachętę, by nie kupować na zapas i nie przepłacać za pamięć, która w danym projekcie nie będzie miała żadnego znaczenia. Brzmi to trochę jak prośba, żeby nie kupować za dużo RAM, bo wtedy podwyżka mniej zaboli i przy okazji wystarczy go dla innych. Raspberry Pi 4 z 3 GB RAM. | Źródło: Raspberry Pi Najważniejsza deklaracja dotyczy przyszłości. Podwyżki mają być tymczasowe. Jeśli ceny pamięci wrócą do normalnego poziomu, producent obiecuje wycofać zmiany i wrócić do wcześniejszych stawek. Firma podkreśla, że jej priorytetem wciąż pozostaje tworzenie tanich komputerów ogólnego przeznaczenia, dostępnych dla każdego, niezależnie od budżetu. Na razie jednak rynek pamięci dyktuje warunki i trudno przewidzieć, kiedy sytuacja się ustabilizuje. Do tego czasu Raspberry Pi musi balansować między rosnącymi kosztami a swoją misją. Ta od początku opierała się na prostym założeniu, że komputer powinien być tani i dostępny dla wszystkich. Te wysokie ceny sprawiają, że naprawdę warto się zastanowić, czy zamiast malinki nie lepiej wziąć tani używany terminal. _Źródło: Raspberry Pi, The Verge / Zdj. otwierające: Unsplash (@jainath)_ komputeryraspberry pi

Raspberry Pi serwuje kolejną podwyżkę. Malinka przestaje być opłacalna Raspberry Pi od lat uchodzi za najtańszy komputer świata, ale ta legenda właśnie dostaje kolejny cios. Firma ogłosi...

#Hardware #komputery #raspberry #pi

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Stop buying streaming boxes: A Raspberry Pi does everything for half the price It really does everything, if you let it. A good streaming box or dongle can cost just as much or quite a bit more tha...

#Single-Board #Computers #Raspberry #Pi #Video #Streaming […]

[Original post on howtogeek.com]

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Raspberry Pi flagship 500+ model now costs almost as much as a Mac Mini — firm Pi launches 3GB model to fight increasing DRAM prices Raspberry Pi prices for various models have increased yet agai...

#Raspberry #Pi

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Raspberry Pi 4 3GB: Enterprise-Grade Benchmarking & Industrial Deployment Strategies (2025 Update) Blog com notícias sobre, Linux, Android, Segurança , etc

The 3GB #Raspberry Pi 4 SKU is undervalued for industrial edge deployments. Key insight from recent benchmarking: lower memory bus contention actually improves USB 3.0 I/O throughput for NAS workloads by ~12% compared to the 8GB model. Read more: 👉 tinyurl.com/unv66jxn

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Raspberry Pi based Smart Emergency Alert System Helmet Build your own Smart Helmet using Raspberry Pi Zero What you will learn Build your own Smart Helmet Work on Cloud Server and Raspberry Pi Fetc...

#100% #Free #Courses #StudyBullet-16 #Free #Courses […]

[Original post on studybullet.com]

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#Raspberry Pi werden noch teurer, neuer Pi 4 mit 3 GByte

Die Kosten für die meisten Raspberry Pi 4 und 5 werden erheblich steigen. Eine neue Variante soll die Preiserhöhungen mildern, ist aber teurer als frühere 8 GByte Modelle.

https://t.ress.at/HSUvn/

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Original post on hackaday.com

Battery Tester Outperforms Cheaper Options Batteries are notoriously difficult pieces of technology to deal with reliably. They often need specific temperatures, charge rates, can’t tolerate phys...

#Battery #Hacks #battery #tester #capacity #Chemistry #current […]

[Original post on hackaday.com]

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Original post on hackaday.com

Battery Tester Outperforms Cheaper Options Batteries are notoriously difficult pieces of technology to deal with reliably. They often need specific temperatures, charge rates, can’t tolerate phys...

#Battery #Hacks #battery #tester #capacity #Chemistry #current […]

[Original post on hackaday.com]

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I moved my Zigbee coordinator off a Raspberry Pi after a year and everything got better When smart home outgrows Pi. Over the past few months, the automation that switches off my Philips Hue lights...

#Smart #Home #Raspberry #Pi #ZigBee

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Raspberry Pi re-releases Raspberry Pi 4 Model B with new version Raspberry Pi has released a new version of the Raspberry Pi 4 Model B. Likely the first with two RAM chips, the Rev 1.5 version costs over 15% less than the new pricing for its 4 GB RAM counterpart.

Raspberry Pi re-releases Raspberry Pi 4 Model B with new version tinyurl.com/3ea5zdjh #Raspberry #RaspberryPi4 #RaspberryPi4ModelB #SBC #singleboardcomputer

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