Raspberry Pi - Introducing: Raspberry Pi 5 (www.raspberrypi.com)
from gamma@programming.dev to linux@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 09:54
https://programming.dev/post/3617999

#linux

threaded - newest

SturgiesYrFase@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:03 next collapse

Great, more unobtainium

100@lemm.ee on 29 Sep 2023 17:36 next collapse

Have they been difficult to get? I’ve always been vaguely interested but never actually looked into getting one.

toikpi@feddit.uk on 30 Sep 2023 07:28 collapse

Go to rpilocator.com and filter by your “region” and check for yourself. Most models seems to be available. The Rapsberry Pi 5 is available for pre-order from a number of suppliers.

MountainTurkey@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Sep 2023 06:04 collapse

I mean uou can get 4’s at retail prices pretty easy right now.

germanatlas@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Sep 2023 10:11 next collapse

🎶 I know what I’m gonna buy soon 🎶

Uncle_Iroh@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:28 collapse

Not a raspberry pi 5 because you won’t be able to find that shit in stock anywhere lmao

nosurprises@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 10:43 next collapse

I mean you can order them right now.

Uncle_Iroh@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:50 next collapse

Sick

Ramenator@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 11:16 next collapse

I can’t find them at any of the German retailers at least. Only one that claims it will probably be sold by 23.10

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 12:21 next collapse

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nosurprises@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 12:53 collapse

www.raspberrypi.com/resellers/

HughJanus@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 14:32 collapse

I clicked the first one and the Pi5 is listed for >$2k and out of stock. Can you be more specific?

nosurprises@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 15:55 collapse

In some areas it can be out of stock due to high demand and low supply, it’s been announced less than 24 hours ago. I don’t know what’s your problem, but stop acting like I owe you something.

HughJanus@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 19:02 collapse

I didn’t act like you owe me anything. Someone asked you for a link to where they can order them and that is not what you posted. It was not helpful.

CmdrShepard@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 04:32 collapse

Is that like when I ordered a 3B and was told it’ll ship in 3 months then 3 months later the retailer emailed me to say that I’ll need to cancel my order because they don’t know when it’ll actually be filled?

Bye@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:48 collapse

Why not?

Uncle_Iroh@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:50 collapse

That’s a big rock Patrick

Usuario@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:16 next collapse

Goddamn it, just after I bought a Beelink mini PC a couple weeks ago.

FuckyWucky@hexbear.net on 28 Sep 2023 10:21 next collapse

Eh that x86 cpu will still be faster than pi5

Uncle_Iroh@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:28 next collapse

No worries, you won’t be able to find one anyways :)

AzuleBlade@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 13:57 collapse

A mini PC is the way to go if you want to self host a media server such as Jellyfin. You have to do a little research, but you can find mini PCs with Intel chips that have Quick Sync for transcoding for around $100 on Amazon.

Gazumi@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:17 next collapse

I have no idea (yet) what I’ll do when I buy one.

KillerTofu@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:19 next collapse

Pihole!

miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:56 next collapse

And more, I hope

KillerTofu@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:51 collapse

Any recommendations?

miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 13:00 collapse

Some form of media center, or hosting a local game server would be cool to make use of all that power

entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 14:42 collapse

Good point. Seems like the Libreelec team are already on it

miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 14:49 collapse

Nice to see, that’s pretty cool

And the good thing about pihole is that it’s so light, you can always add it, too. I’m using a 1st gen pi for it, and even that is almost a waste of resources for how little a pihole actually needs

pzyko@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 10:57 next collapse

Bit overpowered for that alone, isn’t it. Got Pi-Hole running on a first gen Pi Zero W without issues and resources to spare.

unwillingsomnambulist@midwest.social on 28 Sep 2023 12:34 collapse

Single-node k3s deployment with Pi-Hole, then?

dditty@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 12:19 collapse

And PiVPN!

obinice@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:52 next collapse

Run a Lemmy instance ;-)

Also retropie <3

beSyl@slrpnk.net on 28 Sep 2023 12:56 collapse

Syncthing

banazir@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:20 next collapse

Oh cool, been waiting for this announcement. Nice.

lea@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 10:21 next collapse

Even the Pi has lost its headphone jack…

Kbobabob@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 10:43 next collapse

There’s just not enough room

/s

tal@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 10:49 next collapse

I mean, if you have USB, for a non-mobile platform, it doesn't really matter. It's not hard to get a USB audio interface.

For cell phones or laptops, I can understand not wanting another thing to plug in, but for something like a Raspberry Pi...shrugs

HurlingDurling@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 10:52 collapse

And you can just get an audio dac hat.

tal@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 11:55 collapse

Hmm. Yeah, though I have to say that the USB route looks cheaper.

https://thepihut.com/collections/raspberry-pi-audio-hats

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=usb+audio+adapter

HurlingDurling@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 17:07 collapse

USB audio will always be better in pricing options, but the question is, which will give you better sound for the price. Of course, this only matters if you think audio quality is more important than price.

tal@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 17:24 collapse

Why would you expect USB to constrain your audio quality?

You're not getting better 0s or 1s based on which bus they're sent over to the DAC.

HurlingDurling@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 18:26 collapse

Please re-read my response. I never said that USB would always constrain the audio quality, but if you get a cheap USB to aux converter, the quality would be lacking vs a more expensive solution.

fkn@lemmy.world on 29 Sep 2023 15:54 collapse

You are making just such a weird argument and it sounds like you are retroactively trying to salvage a bad position because you made a mistake.

  1. If you care strongly about audio quality. A built-in doesn’t have any quality guarantees… why then does usb vs hat matter?

  2. If quality is your concern why bring up price in the first part? It is blatantly obvious that cheap parts *might" equate to cheap quality. This is blatantly obvious.

  3. Obviously there will be USB solutions that are equal or better solutions than prebuilt rpi dac hats since the primary dac hats are exceptionally niche.

This response just sounds like you got caught out in your mistake/bad argument. Why be a dick about it?

HurlingDurling@lemm.ee on 29 Sep 2023 17:18 collapse

If I’d made a mistake I would go back and correct it without giving it a second thought, but I will concede that maybe it wasn’t clearly argumented. Maybe I sounded like a dick to you but I assure you it wasn’t my intent. “There are nice islands in a sea of dicks”

Maximilious@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 10:56 next collapse

Very cool they've added an interface to connect a peripheral that can have one though.

StarkillerX42@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 11:32 next collapse

To be fair, the pi’s have always been famous for low quality sound cards, so there’s plenty of hats that can add the functionality.

amio@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 12:32 next collapse

I generally hate the "just get dongles lol" argument but... maybe it's not a huge loss in this one specific case. I've had four models over 3 generations (B, 2-something and 3) and the audio jack always kinda... sucked.

Wils@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:41 collapse

How do you mean, what sucked about it?

amio@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 12:44 next collapse

Connectors seemed low quality and so did the audio. Crackling and sounding... sort of like a broken toy for kids.

passepartout@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 12:47 next collapse

I remember when i wanted to make something like a chromecast audio with volumio and spotify connect on my Pi 2. I had to buy an audio DAC (~30€) because I could not get the 3.5 Jack to work correctly. It just sounded bad when cranked up to a volume you could actually hear something. You almost couldn’t understand lyrics in songs due to the static noise. I read that this was due to being badly shielded from the power source.

The Audio jack on the Pi 3 I have is ok, but still not that good compared to the Audio DAC of course. But then again, the audio DAC i bought for 30€ was said to be on par with 1000€ standalone audio interfaces lol.

sping@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 13:38 next collapse

It was some hacked-together sound output that was terrible quality compared to a real sound card output, AFAIK. You could make it make sounds, but if you care at all about quality it was a non-starter, which is one reason a whole lot of audio hats exist.

freebee@sh.itjust.works on 01 Oct 2023 08:51 collapse

The sound quality sucks.

CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 17:57 collapse

It’s a shame that even the Pi Foundation is cutting corners. Cutting corners and removing features all while not even coming close to their target $35 price. Almost double for the base model. This doesn’t feel like it fits the spirit of the original Pi Foundation goals at all.

makeasnek@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:34 next collapse

These things are great for !boinc@sopuli.xyz often time leagues more efficient per watt in terms of computation than regular PCs. I have a couple of 'em working on cancer research and computing to develop an open-source patent-free covid antiviral. You don’t need a PhD to make a difference, all you need is a processor :)

bionicjoey@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 11:03 next collapse

If they were more efficient per watt for scientific computing, you’d hear about researchers building HPC clusters from them.

CephalonKappa@discuss.tchncs.de on 28 Sep 2023 11:06 next collapse

*more efficient than regular PCs. Not more efficient than supercomputers lol

makeasnek@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 23:29 collapse

If they were more efficient per watt for scientific computing, you’d hear about researchers building HPC clusters from them.

Efficiency per watt is not the same as total cost of ownership. Pis are expensive for the amount of compute you get from them in total, but the compute itself is efficient per watt. You would need at least a dozen Pis to rival the latest CPU processors in terms of total output, a dozen Pis is more expensive to buy than a single CPU.

towerful@programming.dev on 28 Sep 2023 11:49 collapse

I did a quick Google.
web.eece.maine.edu/…/green_machines.html

Is the best actual test data I can find. It uses a physical power meter, so it’s full system (not TDP or self reporting power consumption).
And it’s a few years out of date.
Seems like Apple silicon is the winner (and will probably continue to be).
The Xeon that beats the rpi4 for GFLOPS/watt is an e5v3, which was launched in 2013 and EOL in 2021.
So there will absolutely be some new Xeon CPUs that will perform better.

However, for a $50 device, it’s probably the best GFLOPS/watt/$ from what little empirical data I can find

dansity@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Sep 2023 10:45 next collapse

For the small price of 250 scalper dollars you will be able to buy it

RickyRigatoni@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 10:52 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/226c7f66-2a60-4e7f-a4cd-4581d4f5496b.webm">

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 10:52 next collapse

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owatnext@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:11 next collapse

<img alt="No!!!" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/c373e80a-2b43-4b1d-822e-56120e76f2a8.jpeg">

[deleted] on 30 Sep 2023 14:12 next collapse

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[deleted] on 30 Sep 2023 14:56 collapse

.

therealbabyshell@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 11:04 next collapse

I wonder if the will make a Pi 500 the all in one form factor is so convenient when traveling

Kichae@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 11:06 next collapse

Are they still playing apologetics for the cops? Because if so, no thanks.

AlteredStateBlob@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 11:11 next collapse

What does that mean?

Kichae@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 11:18 collapse

Here's a google prompt for you: "raspberry pi police"

YaBoyMax@programming.dev on 28 Sep 2023 11:31 next collapse

No need to be an ass about it. For those who don’t want to sift through an article, the RPi Foundation apparently hired an ex-cop who had been known to use their products to conduct surveillance, and that caused a controversy.

urshanabi@lemmygrad.ml on 28 Sep 2023 13:11 collapse

Thanks for the info, I will say I did chuckle from OP’s response but this is infinitely more useful.

bappity@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:00 next collapse

everybody claps and cheers when you say jUsT gOoGLe iT instead of being a decent human being and providing context

asexualchangeling@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 13:09 collapse

Especially annoying considering google has been getting worse every day

bappity@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:23 collapse

I wouldn’t know because I haven’t used it in years, stuck to duckduckgo 😁

alteropen@noc.social on 28 Sep 2023 15:34 collapse

@bappity @asexualchangeling sadly duck duck go is basically just a bing proxy

bappity@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:44 collapse

at least it’s not Google and it works for me ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

amio@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 12:29 collapse

"Are they still [irrelevant complaint]"
"What?"
"GoOgLe iT"

Sigh...

Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:33 collapse

“Raspberry Pi eats babies”.

VinesNFluff@pawb.social on 28 Sep 2023 12:51 collapse

Well – they never really backed down on what they did. Far as we know the out-and-proud espionage cop is still in their payroll, and the only response they ever gave to the story was a generalised ‘We think the entire thing is being astroturfed and that no one reasonable is ACTUALLY against us hiring this guy who bragged about all the espionage he did’ back in the day.

They never said anything about it since. So it’s fair to assume they still believe in what they did.

ohto@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 11:35 next collapse

I want to be excited about this, but I just don’t believe I’ll actually be able to get one for retail price. For much of the RP4 lifecycle they prioritized corporate sales, and regular consumers were out of luck. I don’t have a lot of faith in them right now.

tal@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 11:37 next collapse

we’re going to ringfence all of the Raspberry Pi 5s we sell until at least the end of the year for single-unit sales to individuals, so you get the first bite of the cherry.

notfromhere@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 12:20 next collapse

They’re probably doing that for first batch bug fixes.

EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 12:33 collapse

To keep alive the community that maintains the packages that businesses use? /s

There are a few things you won’t forget and the last years were one of those events. Thankfully the competition made leaps forward regarding software support.

Do you remember FTDI-gate 1 & 2 (approx. 1 decade ago)? I do and FTDI never made it back onto my BOM and probably never will again, at least until SiliconLabs, WCH, and Holtek screw it up.

flatpandisk@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 13:36 collapse

We are dumping the RPI computer modules form our BOM too. The N100 is at a very low price point and readily available. Never again in my BOM.

Tak@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 12:49 collapse

It’s gotten to the point with Windows 11 killing so many thin clients for businesses with TPM that you can typically find used ones for nearly as much as a Pi. Unless you need the size and efficiency I just struggle to find reason to buy another Pi if I need to selfhost something.

Pis are really cool but they really have become more corporate focused and it shows.

SatyrSack@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 00:26 collapse

What should I look for in a thin client if I want to prioritize low power consumption?

Imnebuddy@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 11:41 next collapse

Finally, a pi good for 4K video! (Apparently Raspberry Pi 4 could as well, but I am assuming this is an improvement. I still have a couple of Raspberry Pi 3’s.)

notfromhere@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 12:21 next collapse

I don’t know about lately, but 4k on Pi 4 was always janky.

Kushan@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:12 next collapse

It doesn’t have h.264 hardware decoding though, so ironically 4k HEVC/h.265 will probably play just fine but 1080p h.264 might struggle depending on your cooling solution.

Imnebuddy@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 14:37 next collapse

That seems to work for my needs. The performance improvements according to this video seems promising: yewtu.be/watch?v=9hYfQ7bRgZg

Imnebuddy@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 17:14 collapse

Then again, after learning about the crappy things the Raspberry Pi Foundation has done, I’m probably better off getting a used Lenovo ThinkCentre or HP EliteDesk Mini (which I already have) for a much lower cost. I was just excited about Raspberry Pi’s finally being powerful enough to handle 4K, but that may be a stretch, too.

entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 14:46 collapse

The folks at Libreelec say it can software decode 4K h264 smoothly

I wonder if it’ll be powerful enough to run a Jellyfin server and actually handle some transcoding now

Kushan@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:42 collapse

Are you sure they said it’ll decode 4k h264 smoothly? I’m seeing them saying 1080p is good, but not 4k.

Here’s a quote from the article you linked, emphasis mine:

RPi5 can software decode AV1, H264, VC1, VP9, and more at 1080p with ease. In our testing with YouTube and inputstream.adaptive a surprising amount of 4K media also plays.

Note that it’s unclear from this quote what Codec the Youtube stream was using, but remember that Youtube is quite low bitrate even at 4k. The implication here is that 1080p h264 is good and low bitrate 4k stuff might be okay, but it will struggle beyond that. Keep in mind that it’s not any worse than RPi 4 in that area, but I don’t think it’s going to be much better either.

entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 23:13 collapse

You quoted those two sentences, but skipped the three sentences right before them:

BCM2712 supports HEVC 4K60 hardware decoding. It no longer supports H264 in hardware. This might sound odd but it removes the RPi4’s 1080p restriction on H264 decoding and the 4K H264 test media we have has played.

To my eyes this implies it works fine for 4K h264. The sentences you quote from are sort of a “furthermore, at 1080p it can handle these more complex codecs as well” to my initial reading.

I’m not saying you’re wrong, just explaining why I parsed this paragraph a bit differently.

Decr@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 16:30 next collapse

Sadly no hardware AV1 decode though. Though it can apparently decode AV1 in software up to 1080p.

Abracadaniel@hexbear.net on 28 Sep 2023 18:30 collapse

You won’t notice a difference in h265 4k video as each has a decoder, but Youtube performance would definitely be improved. My Rpi4 struggles with 4k60p youtube videos because it lacks a VP9 decoder.

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 12:13 next collapse

I wonder if they can finally run on fully open source firmware.

the_lone_wolf@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 13:01 next collapse

Broadcom is the main problem

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 13:03 collapse

Our newer, faster CPU is complemented by a newer, faster GPU: Broadcom’s VideoCore VII, developed here in Cambridge, with fully open source Mesa drivers from our friends at Igalia.

Idk about fully but the above is a good change imo

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 14:00 collapse

Open source driver is definitely a good thing.

This doesn’t say anything about the firmware itself tho.

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 15:52 collapse

Indeed; my bad. Hadn’t had my ☕ yet I guess lol

Decipher0771@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 12:33 next collapse

I loved Pi’s, but I hate the micro hdmi connectors

Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:32 collapse

I’m not a fan but I’m guessing it’s form factor?

I had to buy a micro HDMI adapter. These video ports are slowly becoming like USB ports and it’s really frustrating.

Decipher0771@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 14:59 collapse

The most annoying part I think is because I so rarely need them. All my Pis run headless, but the one time I do need direct console access I have to find the bloody adapters. Leaving them attached and unused is just asking them to get damaged.

Rather than using micro-hdmi (which hardly anything uses), stick a pair of usb-c DP ports instead if size is an issue. at least then I don’t need adapters that are ONLY needed for the Pi.

perishthethought@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 12:34 next collapse

Am I correct in saying this Pi5 will be the best chance at a very performant desktop PC? That seems very much where they were headed with all these designs.

BrightCandle@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:55 next collapse

For not a lot more you can now get NUC like machines with Celeron’s, Pentiums and get to choose NVMe SSDS and RAM amounts and even Wifi cards (so wifi 6e or 7) and 2.5 gbit/s ethernet. At these sorts of prices they are running into the low end of NUCs at $100 and they don’t compete well on a whole range of factors. They are still cheaper but its not the 30-40 of the Pi before prices went nuts and this new higher price point isn’t as clear cut.

pedz@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 14:03 next collapse

AFAIK that’s one of the goals of the ARM (and maybe eventually RISC-V) architecture. It’s doing well on mobile and the low consumption is needed for a future that will require less energy. Or at least, do more with less. Having ARM desktops would also merge the mobile and the desktop environments.

Apple has moved to this architecture, and software wise, Linux is very compatible too. Even Microsoft knows and is trying (clumsily) to move to ARM.

The Pi5 will indeed open new possibilities on that front.

Schmeckinger@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 16:12 collapse

For performance you probably want something like a Orange Pi 5, in most workloads its significantly faster and uses less power doing so. But is also 20$ more expensive and probably doesn’t have the community support around it.

perishthethought@lemm.ee on 30 Sep 2023 18:14 collapse

Cool, I’ll check it out, thanks!

obinice@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:51 next collapse

I assume this will be prohibitively expensive (I really can’t shell out any more than £60 and that’s pushing it already), and probably impossible to get my hands on.

But if it’s affordable and actually available? Hell yeah, this thing looks fantastic. I love that we’re making something awesome here in the UK and sharing it with the world.

Will we finally be able to run N64 games on this hardware, do you think?

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 28 Sep 2023 12:57 next collapse

N64 could be done before with overclocking by the looks of it, so this should handle it as a baseline.

Although nothing really gets you over the “our games are in 3D and we don’t really know what we’re doing” jank of the PS1 and N64 era.

Eldritch@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 20:10 collapse

Considering single core performance was the main thing holding it back previously. There is a good chance Nintendo 64 emulation should be better. Other Arm based SBC have been able to do it relatively easily for a while.

BrightCandle@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 12:52 next collapse

Its not very price competitive now. Its moved into the low end N100 territory with ITX boards and while its smaller and a bit less power its no where near as performant. They will still have some use in smaller applications but 5V x 5A is a chunky cable. I am not convinced this is the way now.

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 16:04 next collapse

My main uses for them weren’t ever desktop but tinkering with simple robotics / telepresence, automation, aprs / mapping, 3d printing (octoprint). Seems like the 5 is overkill for that. I guess there’s always the pi zero.

CmdrShepard@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 16:10 collapse

Haven’t read the article but is it seriously 5V 5A for the power cable? It seems absurd that they wouldn’t put a voltage regulator on board to accept a 12V 2A power supply.

Nath@aussie.zone on 28 Sep 2023 17:07 next collapse

The idea is they run off USB. Having said that, I’m pretty sure most of us just plug it into mains power.

CmdrShepard@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 17:05 collapse

Even still I wonder if they could have added USB-PD capabilities in order to use 9V or 15V to bring the current down. A 5V 5A USB supply is very unique (even the previous 5V 3A was niche) as standard USB supplies that we’re all used to typically max out at 2.5A. $12 for the official power supply is a decent price but you’re severely limited on options if you don’t have the official supply.

cryptowillem@lemmy.ca on 30 Sep 2023 03:31 collapse

Looking at the power supply listing, it says that it is USB-PD. It lists output as “5A @ 5.1V, 3A @ 9V, 2.25A @ 12V, 1.8A @ 15V”.

I fully admit that I don’t understand USB-PD, though. Does the Pi have to support it too?

CmdrShepard@lemmy.one on 30 Sep 2023 04:23 collapse

Yes, USB-PD requires a handshake confirming that both the charger and device are capable of using it.

I didn’t look any further than the article listing the power supply as 5V5A so its good that it supports higher voltages, but really odd that it’d push out 25W at 5V as this is very demanding on the wiring since it has internal resistance which causes the voltage to drop with increasing length. The whole purpose of USB-PD is to up the voltage while reducing current to mitigate losses (and heat and wire thickness) and supply much higher wattage without having to use chunky wiring. This has been an issue with the Pi for quite a while which is why you always hear troubleshooting responses talking about having too small of a power supply. Now they’ve upped the power requirements while still using a 5V baseline. I did see the article mention that it has a voltage regulator capable of handling 20A of current so maybe it’s just poorly worded with regards to the official power supply.

tony@lemmy.hoyle.me.uk on 29 Sep 2023 13:14 collapse

It’s pretty hefty… and there’s an official cooling solution to remove all that heat too…

They’re basically going for the low end desktop market with it I think.

skymtf@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Sep 2023 13:09 next collapse

They should stop supporting cops!

archy@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:42 next collapse

How would they achieve that?

VinesNFluff@pawb.social on 28 Sep 2023 15:26 collapse

Not bragging about hiring a dude whose entire portfolio is invasive mass surveillance would be a start.

Edit to add: Since the genie’s out the bottle on that, a little bit of transparency over what the dude’s role in their company actually is and what their intentions are, or heck, literally anything would be nice.

Like, personally I think ‘ceasing to be a cop’ is the best thing a person in the police could ever possibly do and pretty much proof they are salvageable as a person, so I’m already inclined to think positively of the espionage dude they hired. But their complete and total opacity, all the way down to blocking/banning anyone who criticised them over it, suggests that his presence in the company is not just a case of ‘he’s good with tech and we hired him’, but rather that his expertise in surveillance specifically is the reason he was hired, and yes, there will be insidious things in new Pi models.

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 17:03 collapse

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VinesNFluff@pawb.social on 28 Sep 2023 17:37 collapse

To be honest on my end I see this as a PR Disaster first and foremost?

Like, I generally prefer to assume incompetence over malice where it is possible, and in the incompetence hypothesis – This is just some extremely bad room-reading skills considering who RPi caters to (Open Source people) and our personality (fundamental distrust of any authority, hatred for anything perceived as ‘control’, further intensified by the constant surveillance in modern proprietary software, etc.) – I don’t think having this man in the team or not is going to change what RPi is like in any way… Not because I assume he’s a good dude, but because presuming imperial governments have any interest in backdooring and surveilling projects like the Pi, then that backdoor either already exists and has existed since the first model ever OR it was added much earlier, quietly, without them blabbering about hiring an ex-spy. That’s just how it be with those things.

I generally assume anything I don’t personally understand is going to have something insidious, to be honest. Like I told the other person, the only way to make sure your hardware isn’t compromised is to have its schematics and the know-how to understand everything that goes on inside it.

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 19:17 collapse

.

trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Sep 2023 14:26 collapse

I’m afraid to ask but… how are they supporting cops?

VinesNFluff@pawb.social on 28 Sep 2023 15:28 collapse

TLDR: Hired a guy whose previous work was 'using tech to do mass surveillance for the British* state, bragged about it, when there was drama over it, they laughed it off as ‘this drama could only possibly be astroturfed and no one reasonable would ever be against this’.

Edit: Fixed mistake

pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz on 28 Sep 2023 16:18 collapse

And that means those chips are likely compromised and full of backdoors by now.

VinesNFluff@pawb.social on 28 Sep 2023 16:35 collapse

Very likely, although officially the guy isn’t working on the boards at all but in building stuff like official cases and shit – That’s just the official story, and given their overall cageyness to speak of the controversy plus the fact that they can always rely on bootlickers to defend them – Yeah. I wouldn’t be trusting an RPi with anything sensitive at this point.

Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:34 next collapse

I’m excited to install retropie for the x time and then never ever touch it until the next iteration.

EveningPancakes@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 15:08 collapse

Are you me?

pedz@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 13:40 next collapse

I kind of moved on to other devices or older models, depending on what is needed. If you just need a low power computer that can run Linux for simple tasks and projects, there’s now lots of alternatives. So far I’ve tried a Banana Pi BPI-M5 and a Le Potato and they’re both promising.

There’s a few instances where an original Raspberry Pi is still needed. For example, it’s super easy to install Home Assistant on a Raspberry Pi while not really supported on other experimental boards. Same with GPIO tinkering with some hit and miss implementation on alternative boards.

The only negative thing that I’ve began not to like about the Raspberry Pi was/is the power management and consumption on the version 4. The fact that I had to use a “dumb” USB-C charger and that everyone on forums and in comments were always “screaming” that you needed a beefier or more powerful power supply kind of killed the enthusiasm for me. Like, I can charge my laptop using a power bank and PD, while the Raspberry Pi 4 complains that it doesn’t get enough power from the same bank. I’m sure they fixed their power issues and PD negotiation in the version 5 but apparently, it will also necessitate a pretty “good” power supply because it can pump up to 25 watts. Personally I don’t need that much power for most of my projects and it’s even annoying because it significantly reduced/reduces the number of ways that I can power the board.

Still, I’ll certainly try it if I can get my hands on one. They are very nice devices and their popularity makes them very standard and compatible. But I’m not in any rush because I’ve since tried alternatives and some will also do just fine too, or even better.

GustavoM@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 13:54 next collapse

No nvme support? Oh come on. Still using microhdmi? OH COME ON

Kushan@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:06 collapse

Apparently there’s going to be an nvme HAT.

GustavoM@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:13 collapse

Should have went with stock support from the get-go, tho. Why? Because nvme lasts ““forever”” and is ideal for servers.

Kushan@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:48 next collapse

But that would increase the already quite high cost for all users, including those that don’t necessarily need it.

Don’t get me wrong, I think the price is arleady too high and for the price I’d have expected more than a faster SoC, but here we are.

a_fancy_kiwi@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 17:05 next collapse

You got a power button too /s

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 19:25 collapse

.

MountainTurkey@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Sep 2023 14:11 collapse

I think f4om the comments on the blog it was that nvme would make the board too think, that’s why they opted for a HAT

GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 13:57 next collapse

Priced at $60 for the 4GB variant, and $80 for its 8GB sibling (plus your local taxes), virtually every aspect of the platform has been upgraded, delivering a no-compromises user experience.

Ehhhhhh, that’s pushing it. Didn’t the v4 and v3 cost in the $30-$40 range?

diverging@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 14:22 next collapse

$35 for 1GB RAM. 4 and 8 GB v4 are $55 and $75.

GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 14:31 collapse

I didn’t see that in the article, but that’s a bit better, thanks.

SatyrSack@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 00:30 collapse

They are talking about what the Pi 3/4 prices were. All that is mentioned about Pi 5 prices in the article is for 4GB/8GB.

CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 18:03 next collapse

Yeah, they didn’t even try to come close to the $35 price point. That was always RPi’s big selling point. I know COVID screwed that up but I was hoping it was a temporary thing, instead it seems they’ve used it as an excuse to raise prices permanently. Really stifles any excitement I had for the Pi 5 as RPi’s biggest advantage over the competition has traditionally been their low entry price. The base model is almost double the $35 point and we all know it’s getting scalped. Good luck getting a Pi 5 for a reasonable price.

captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 19:41 collapse

One thing to notice, there are jumpers on the PCB for 8, 4, 2, and 1GB on the Pi 5. They’re selling hte 8 and 4 variant now. I’m guessing a 2 or 1GB model will hit the $35 price point.

twelve12@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 19:09 collapse

If you could fine one, then maybe

ikidd@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:19 next collapse

Fool me once…

Polar@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 14:28 next collapse

Realistically probably not getting one for less than $160CAD.

At that point, might as well just buy a used Dell optiplex or something. These boards are absurdly priced, and you’ll never get it for MSRP.

Even with the added power consumption of the Dell you’ll pull out ahead lol

floofloof@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 14:56 next collapse

I remember when the Raspberry Pi was the amazing $15 computer. Times have changed.

ThatFembyWho@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Sep 2023 17:33 collapse

Amazing for what exactly? I remember them being unreliable, slow af and not really good for much other than collecting dust.

I mean sure the idea was cool, in principle, but they needed a serious upgrade in specs. Now they got it and everyone bitches bc it comes at a price?

IAm_A_Complete_Idiot@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 17:55 next collapse

Idk about everyone else but I was fine with the specs. A basic Linux machine that can hook up to the network and run simple python scripts was plenty for a ton of use cases. They didn’t need to be desktop competitors. The market didn’t need to be small form factor high performance machines, and I’d argue it wasn’t.

ThatFembyWho@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Sep 2023 01:14 collapse

They still sell the old slow ones don’t they? from the website: “Raspberry Pi 1 Model A+ will remain in production until at least January 2026” “Raspberry Pi 3 Model B will remain in production until at least January 2028” etc etc.

If you like pain, go get yourself a rpi1 lol. As for me, idk… I’m drawn more to VMs and containers which can run very well even on a 2011 tower pc (with few upgrades over the years).

frezik@midwest.social on 28 Sep 2023 17:56 collapse

  • Kiosks – my makerspace uses one for guest signin
  • Pihole – make your life less ad-infested without browser plugins
  • Octoprint – run your 3d printers
  • Home voice assistant without relying on a big company of any kind, or sending them sounds of you having sex

The first models were rough on reliability, but they got a lot better around Model 2B and onward. SD cards with A1 or A2 rating help a lot.

ThatFembyWho@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Sep 2023 00:58 collapse

I don’t need any of those things tho. Mostly what I need is decent IO throughput which was unnecessarily constrained on earlier pis by poor design choices. The pi4 is the first to really shine in that regard.

I have a pi2 and I used it as a libreelec media center, and it was Ok in that capacity, but it’s far too slow to transfer larger files regardless of how you do it (all relies on a slow usb interface).

SexualPolytope@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Sep 2023 15:39 collapse

Used Lenovo Thinkcentres are also a good option.

kn100@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 14:29 next collapse

While there are now X86 SBC / Mini Computers that aren’t far off the Pi in price, the real benefits of the Pi aren’t just the fact that it offers a certain amount of compute for a certain price.

  • It’s still lower power than most x86 SBCs overall, which matters with portable/remote applications

  • Its schematics are usually available

  • They’re easy to get and have a usually guaranteed availability, so when one dies you should be able to get another

  • its got a decent ecosystem around it of hardware and software, which basically nobody else can claim

  • it’s a fairly standard form factor, so fits into existing stuff well.

  • It’s likely we will see a compute module for the Pi 5 as well at a guess, which means you can treat the vanilla Pi 5 as a dev board for whatever product you’re developing, and then use a potential CM5 as the core of your product once it’s ready to go!

If all you need is a home server or a Linux box, then sure get an X86 SBC, but the Pi isn’t irrelevant, not by a long shot! Congratulations on releasing yet another sweet spot product, I’ll be picking one up as soon as I think of a use for one!

vic_rattlehead@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:47 next collapse

Easy to get?

CaptPretentious@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:28 next collapse

Supposedly because there’s no through hole components, everything is surface mount, it should be much easier to manufacturer.

kn100@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 20:48 collapse

When I say easy to get, I don’t necessarily mean “in stock” - and that is obviously a huge consideration. What I do mean that as far as I know the Pi foundation plans to keep manufacturing older boards for a long time since some customers can’t just easily upgrade to the latest Pi, let alone move to a whole new platform. Is the Beelink x86 PC you got last week going to still be for sale without any significant revisions in 6 months?

Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Sep 2023 19:03 collapse

Clearly a bot.

twelve12@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 19:08 next collapse

You’re probably right, ashamed I didn’t notice though

downhomechunk@midwest.social on 28 Sep 2023 19:31 collapse

There are bots on lemmy? I thought I escaped the bots…

kn100@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 20:45 collapse

Lol I assure you I’m no bot. I just think that people forget that the Pi fills a niche that I know many self hosty types like myself no longer need it to fill, and the Pi 5 imo is another slam dunk in terms of nailing filling that particular niche. Other ARM SBCs tend to always have trouble with GPU hardware acceleration due to the weird MediaTek or rockchip SoCs they have or end up pinned to some ancient kernel version missing sources.

I too moved away from Pis to an X86 setup (kn100.me/erying-11800h/) something I talk about in great detail in that blog post, but appreciate the Pi exists and continues to evolve in the way it is. Not everything is about mac compute per dollar for everybody!

downhomechunk@midwest.social on 29 Sep 2023 00:47 next collapse

That sounds like something a bot would say!

I wanted to get a rpi4 when they were nowhere to be found. I refused to pay a scalper so I ended up with a few rockchip devices. I like tinkering and trying different things with them. I made one into an android streaming / dvr / emulation box. I turned a low power one into a pi hole. And I have an orange pi 5 that I still don’t know what I want tondo with it.

I don’t have any need for another x86_64 device. I have plenty of them already. That being said, I probably won’t buy a rpi5 either. Or at least I won’t rush to buy one.

kn100@sh.itjust.works on 29 Sep 2023 00:57 collapse

Beep Boop I’m in ur Lemmys astroturfin ur as yet unavailable SBCs.

Nah in all seriousness I too don’t need a pi 5. I just respect what the people behind the Pi project are doing, and it upsets me that people are mad about what is in my opinion a very solid evolution of the Pi because of the availability issues of the Pi 4 during the largest supply shortage the world has seen in ALL consumer goods, not just hobbyist SBCs. Yes that sucked, but there were shortages in virtually everything else too. They also happen to be manufactured in my hometown which means they get a special place in my heart.

Brb sifting thru ur data and targeting ads.

downhomechunk@midwest.social on 29 Sep 2023 01:03 collapse

They’re manufactured in the UK right? You should probably go to bed!

The GPU crunch was way more painful for me. I waited as long as I could and even went igpu for a year. Finally I overpaid for a nvidia gpu that never played nice with slackware / wayland. It ended up forcing me to replace it with an amd gpu recently. Wanna buy a gently used 3060 ti?

Please serve me more beer and liquor ads. I haven’t had a drink in almost a decade but that’s all I seem to see when I’m not on my pi-hole filtered home network.

Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 Oct 2023 09:51 collapse

My bad then. The formatting looked like typical AI opening-bullet-list-closing. I stand corrected.

Crow@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 14:44 next collapse

The real exciting news is the possibility of the pi 4 dropping in price as it’s now outdated.

CmdrShepard@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 16:07 next collapse

Not sure if that’ll happen as the Pi3 never dropped in price after the Pi4 came out.

Schmuppes@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 20:46 collapse

Will they keep producing them, though?

KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 14:49 next collapse

Can’t wait for this to be impossible to buy from anyone but scalpers.

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 15:53 next collapse

We’d like to thank you: we’re going to ringfence all of the Raspberry Pi 5s we sell until at least the end of the year for single-unit sales to individuals, so you get the first bite of the cherry.

Lemmchen@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 16:17 collapse

rpilocator.com shows the Pi situation has been solved for a while.

a_fancy_kiwi@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 17:01 next collapse

Sort of. I still haven’t been able to snag the top of the line CM4 (WiFi, 8gig ram, 32 gig emmc). I’ve seen a handful of CM4s with different configs that I don’t want. But for the 4B, yeah they can be bought now.

Edit: haven’t been able to snag one in my region*

cesium@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 23:45 collapse

Not really. Higher end models are regularly sold out. In stock Pis are sold at an insane premium.

circuscritic@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 15:09 next collapse

The Pi foundation screwed over its original customer base by diverting practically ALL available inventory to business customers. Good riddance.

WindowsEnjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 15:43 next collapse

Why business would buy raspberries? I am out of the loop.

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 15:54 next collapse

I guess because it’s a cheap way to do embedded computing? Idk.

megopie@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 28 Sep 2023 16:08 next collapse

So, they’re really easy to work with and relatively affordable, so great for prototyping, and acceptable for production if a company wants to get stuff out the door without getting a proper custom built solution that would be better in the long run.

When spin (electric scooter app rental company) pulled out of Seattle, they didn’t pick up a lot of the scooters there. People started pulling them apart when it was deemed they were legally abandoned, and it turned out they were all running on raspberry pi’s as their brains.

Ultimately it’s save money on the development side since it allows companies to use less experienced or specialized employees. It’s obviously expensive in the long term since a custom built system that only does what you need it to would cost less

WindowsEnjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 16:13 collapse

That’s so cool! Thanks!

circuscritic@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 16:09 next collapse

There are good business use cases for Pi’s, you can search online to learn more if you want.

That’s not the issue. The Raspberry Pi Foundation stopped supplying retail resellers and shipped 99% of ALL of their inventory to business customers for the past several years. Which is why you can’t find consistent stock, and why scalpers are mysteriously the only ones able to have reliable inventory.

It’s not a secret, you can look up any number of news stories covering it. Originally they could blame the chip shortage, but long after that’s over, they’re still diverting almost everything they manufacture to business channels, and screwing over the hobbyists who built their brand.

Screw them. I’m not supporting them with my money ever again, and I have double digit amounts going back to the RPi2.

WindowsEnjoyer@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 16:14 next collapse

Lol. Maybe I should sell my inventory. Still have like 2 RPI zero, 3 RPI3B+, 2 RPI4 and one RPI400… 😅 Their price is currently like 3-4x higher than I bought.

BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk on 29 Sep 2023 11:03 collapse

It’s not even just built their brand, built the damn software, documentation, did a lot of the testing and put up with pis being a bit dodgy out of the box for a year every time a new model came out.

matlag@sh.itjust.works on 29 Sep 2023 00:27 collapse

For example:

farm.bot

There are others. Plenty of small/medium businesses just don’t have the resources to develop small computers and the matching software stack. In that regards, the RPi is an appealing choice.

Cysioland@lemmygrad.ml on 29 Sep 2023 10:46 collapse

This thing looks so fucking cool and simultaneously somewhat dystopian

KillAllPoorPeople@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:58 next collapse

Once they hired that former cop who bragged about using these RPI’s for “legal” surveillance police operations, I was done with them. This goes completely against the DIY spirit. There are so many better options out there without cops and without snarky Twitter social media managers.

krolden@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 00:53 next collapse

What ever happened with all that? Do they still work there?

CrypticCoffee@lemmy.ml on 04 Oct 2023 02:45 collapse

What is a good alternative you would recommend?

somedaysoon@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 18:46 collapse

Remember when they said the Rpi3 had 1Gbps speeds. That’s when they started to lose me. Pine64 has had a far better competing board going back to the Rpi3, and they don’t use scummy marketing practices like the Pi Foundation.

circuscritic@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 18:53 next collapse

Yes, Pine64 is absolutely an organization that adheres to their stated ethos. They are what the Pi foundation should have been, but only pretends to be.

themoken@startrek.website on 29 Sep 2023 00:02 collapse

I dunno about ethos, but I do know Pine can also make false claims. I bought a Rock64 years back and they touted it as 4k60 video capable with an integrated GPU and that wasn’t realistic at all. The software stack was still very immature on release. From their own wiki, years later, it still doesn’t work and key parts still haven’t been upstreamed.

cole@lemdro.id on 29 Sep 2023 14:18 collapse

Libre computer is pretty good too. I’m a big fan of the Libre computer renegade

Gamey@feddit.de on 28 Sep 2023 15:27 next collapse

We will see if this one is actually available, I mean I would definitely like one but not for 100€+ because scalpers got theie hands on the entire supply!

bappity@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 15:32 next collapse

more like Raspberry Bye 5 (the stock will all be scalped)

[deleted] on 28 Sep 2023 15:38 next collapse

.

lauha@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 18:11 collapse

Better support? Better drivers? Larger community? More open? Longer support period? More ethical product? More HDMI outputs? Cheaper? More third party projects available?

You have to be more specific. Better is a very broad term

agent_flounder@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 15:56 next collapse

For all of us bitter people who couldn’t get an RPi 3 let alone 4 for less than a fortune during the recent dark times…

We’d like to thank you: we’re going to ringfence all of the Raspberry Pi 5s we sell until at least the end of the year for single-unit sales to individuals, so you get the first bite of the cherry.

So I will probably preorder one because why not.

lukas@lemmy.haigner.me on 29 Sep 2023 05:36 collapse

Someone needs to test and find the bugs so that the corporate users get a good experience next year.

SBJ@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 16:29 next collapse

At those prices you’re really better off getting a lower end NUC format computer which can be found for under $100 USD. Raspberry Pi was cool and innovative when it was new but those days are long gone.

I’ve bought a couple of cheap Beelink machines and I’ve been really happy with them so far.

zarquon@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 18:23 next collapse

Seriously. I was thinking about one for a home theater pc a bit ago. Bought a used thinkcentre off ebay for $40 instead. Much better performance and price.

zarquon@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 18:41 collapse

cheapskatesguide.org/…/best-mini-servers.html

This article was trending at the time. On hackernews I think.

I really did get the $40 price for an m600 like he mentioned in it.

LoganNineFingers@lemmy.ca on 29 Sep 2023 03:51 collapse

Thank you for posting this!

lauha@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 19:49 next collapse

Comparable power consumption too? Similar GPIO available?

Are you even comparing similar things

zarquon@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 22:07 next collapse

You can get similar power consumption.

As for gpio… Add a Pico as a USB pass-through for a few bucks.

lauha@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 12:57 collapse

So an additional device hanging in the breeze just to gain even some features and pico is hardly a replacement for full rpi gpio. Doesn’t really seem like a better solution.

CobolSailor@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 15:21 collapse

It all depends on what your usecase is. If someone’s just starting out and wanting to do gpio stuff with a Linux os, yeah the pi may still be the best bet since it’s got such a large following and guides written. But if someone’s got more experience and just needs a cheap small form factor machine to run Linux and interact with some non mission critical gpios, a small nuc with a pico will give you a greater bang for the buck!

lauha@lemmy.one on 30 Sep 2023 04:14 collapse

Obviously it is usecase dependent. But original comment claimed you are better off getting a small nuc for the same price, as if it is better for any usecase. Please, go reply to them :)

krolden@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 00:49 collapse

Dell thin clients have gpio

lauha@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 12:45 collapse

And are way bulkier with much larger power draw

Xavier@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 22:00 collapse

Would you recommend a particular Beelink model?

I have been interested after seeing some reviews, but I’m not sure what would be the best deal.

Hence would greatly appreciate some recommendations.

riskable@programming.dev on 28 Sep 2023 16:35 next collapse

Great! Now we just need an announcement about the successor to the RP2040…

axum@kbin.social on 28 Sep 2023 17:03 next collapse

esp32 has entered the chat

frezik@midwest.social on 28 Sep 2023 17:49 collapse

Custom IO is where the RP2040 shines. There aren’t many like it.

stsquad@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 17:52 collapse

There are rp2040 bits in the new RP1 custom silicon southbridge thing.

twelve12@lemmy.ml on 28 Sep 2023 19:07 collapse

Why do you want a successor?

riskable@programming.dev on 30 Sep 2023 01:51 collapse

I want more cores and more importantly, more ADC pins. Also, being able to use more PIOs simultaneously would be fantastic.

Furthermore I want one of those matrix modules aka “AI accelerators” to play with 😁

twelve12@lemmy.ml on 30 Sep 2023 01:52 collapse

How do the matrix modules work?

riskable@programming.dev on 30 Sep 2023 22:51 collapse

As far as I know, black magic 🤷

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 28 Sep 2023 19:02 next collapse

This comment section ⚰️

fox@beehaw.org on 28 Sep 2023 19:15 next collapse

Does anyone know if the R5 will fit in the Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard case?

lauha@lemmy.one on 28 Sep 2023 19:45 collapse

Even Rpi4 doesn’t fit in the rpi400 keyboard case. They are different products

YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 19:40 next collapse

I told myself id give up all hope if there was no m.2 slot . Guess I’m going on a diet and never eating Pi again!

shiftenter@beehaw.org on 28 Sep 2023 21:12 next collapse

They announced the M.2 HAT in the linked article…

YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU@lemm.ee on 28 Sep 2023 22:39 collapse

Really not interested in a hat, should be on the bottom like all modern sbcs

Helmic@hexbear.net on 29 Sep 2023 10:29 collapse

There is Rock Pi and other SoC’s that have that. That H3/H3+ looks like a good option for a low power server for self hosting.

wax@lemmy.wtf on 28 Sep 2023 19:54 next collapse

I think it was a mistake to remove hardware video encoding. Even the hw encoder for H264 1080p 30fps was better than no encoder. Apparently they think sw encoding can replace it…yeah… the cpu is more powerful, but not that much more. I think intels N100 processors will be more competitive for applications involving video/webcam

droidpenguin@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 19:56 next collapse

While I love Raspberry Pis and have a few older ones, it’s a shame that the latest ones were very hard to come by and far exceeded the $35 price point.

I was looking to upgrade to a Pi 4 a while back but prices were outrageous or it was sold out completely. I eventually discovered tiny form factor PCs.

I bought some used Lenovo Tiny ThinkCentres (which are about 10x more powerful than a Pi 4), off eBay for ~ $70. I upgraded the Ram and SSDs and they are quite capable, low power units!

So to anyone looking for a low power computer to run Linux, consider buying used off eBay. You can get some pretty good deals on used hardware that’s more capable.

Schmuppes@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 20:05 next collapse

A friend of my dad’s old PC recently shit the bed and recommended such a ThinkCenter purely by specs and price point. I did some remote setup last night and I got the impression that it was pretty snappy running Windows 10. Such a tiny computer is definitely on my list for the future.

Llamadramas@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 22:03 next collapse

Is it something you could run an arcade emulator from? Thinking of building my kids a tiny arcade.

droidpenguin@lemmy.world on 29 Sep 2023 00:49 collapse

That would be more than capable. Retro emulation can run on very low end hardware.

But here’s an ebay listing for same model that I bought earlier. It doesn’t include an SSD but you can buy M.2 SSDs for very cheap which I also did. Plus they’re much faster and more reliable than micro SD cards.

It’s very easy to open the machine up which I liked.

RAM upgrades are cheap too but 8GB is a lot for most cases.

A lot of corporate environments use these so when they upgrade you can find them used for dirt cheap, if you don’t mind some possible cosmetic defects. Mine are just stacked on a shelf and I just use them as servers for docker and whatnot.

InputZero@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 19:40 collapse

If you need something with power sure! RasPi has a huge community that supports it, that’s what sets it apart.

Schmuppes@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 20:02 next collapse

In a store nowhere near you. And not on the interwebs either.

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 28 Sep 2023 21:53 next collapse

Oh come now, it’s the principle of the thing.

But indeed I doubt I’ll be able to buy one for a long time.

Schmuppes@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 22:37 collapse

I’m pretty glad I got myself a Pi 4 for the normal price when it was relatively fresh on the market. I’m tempted to try and get a Pi 5 to replace it and use the Pi 4 for something else at some point. I’m not sure what that might be though, and I feel like the expected scarcity is what even makes me consider it at all. I use my Pi 4 for Kodi on my trusty dumb TV and have recently put my old 3B+ to use for my 3D printer. I’m now left with no spare Pi for whatever might arise.

DokPsy@infosec.pub on 28 Sep 2023 23:03 collapse

Might as well add some picos to scratch that itch. And the rabbit hole that micro controllers bring… next thing you know, your work desk is also a solder station, a hot air station, PCB design, circuit design, and you’ve got two extra diy printers in various state of being built/rebuilt

I don’t have a problem, you have a problem

CobolSailor@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 13:45 collapse

I started out the same way and now my desk is cluttered with partially completed projects and devices in various states of taken apart. But for me the fun part is learning something new along the project journey. The microcontrollers were a game changer due to their low cost. I’m not trying to fry them, but hey if I screw up who cares it was a couple bucks anyways.

For circuits I design I’ve mostly been having them created overseas and I’ll solder on the components but I’m really curious about hacking a toaster into a refry oven or whatever their called and soldering surface mount components. Not that I need the small form factor or I’m making enough circuits to warrant trying to save on cost, I’m just curious and want to try haha. Gonna need a bigger desk…

DokPsy@infosec.pub on 29 Sep 2023 22:12 collapse

Honestly, get the flux and a hot air station instead, imo. Then again, I prefer being able to have control over where the heat is going instead of reflowing everything at once

toikpi@feddit.uk on 30 Sep 2023 07:21 collapse

I have pre-ordered one for delivery in October. If you look at rpilocator.com you will find various models in stock at the official price. The Raspberry Pi clearly isn’t the tool for you

Schmuppes@lemmy.world on 30 Sep 2023 13:48 collapse

Oh it certainly is.

erre@programming.dev on 28 Sep 2023 22:50 next collapse

I gotta resist the urge… I have two Pis idle 🤦‍♂️

WolfhoundRO@lemmy.world on 28 Sep 2023 23:19 collapse

I have a 4 on server hosting and 3 3s idle. If I buy the 5 I would have 4 Pis idle

mub@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 00:42 next collapse

They go for good prices on eBay.

bitwolf@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 06:08 collapse

But you should keep them because you could have a good use for it in a future side project… right? … right???

mub@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 08:18 collapse

Definitely. Got to be something that will come up.

WuTang@lemmy.ninja on 29 Sep 2023 13:26 collapse

i have no sympathy for hoarders

WolfhoundRO@lemmy.world on 29 Sep 2023 13:30 collapse

Your disregard for my future projects disgusts me

WuTang@lemmy.ninja on 29 Sep 2023 13:37 next collapse

🤝 fair enough!

Ibex0@lemmy.world on 29 Sep 2023 14:58 next collapse

The future: when I’ll finally use this stuff.

aracebo@unilem.org on 30 Sep 2023 04:18 collapse

I made a nice nextcloud server on mine :)

WolfhoundRO@lemmy.world on 30 Sep 2023 14:57 collapse

I was also planning to do one with a new 1TB hdd or ssd attached. This might be what the 4 will become due to its CPU and memory

aracebo@unilem.org on 08 Oct 2023 00:54 collapse

Yes, this is exactly what I did, with a 1TB SSD. I tried to host a Jellyfin server as well, but it didn’t have the oomph for that. A plan for my 10yo Mac Pro once I finally retire it lol

cesium@sh.itjust.works on 28 Sep 2023 23:41 next collapse

Love the PCIe interface upgrade. Hope they expand on it even more in the future.

RatzChatsubo@lemm.ee on 29 Sep 2023 00:25 next collapse

Will it handle all features of Plex? Like streaming high def and using all plexamp features?

krolden@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 00:47 next collapse

Theres much better options for that

Piemanding@sh.itjust.works on 29 Sep 2023 02:03 next collapse

But are there cheaper options… who am I kidding. Raspberry Pi 5 will instantly get scalped for 80+ dollars.

Edit: looks like they are already 60-80 dollars

sto@lemmy.world on 29 Sep 2023 02:23 collapse

Any suggestions that you could make? I’m in the market for replacing my plex box.

M500@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 05:56 next collapse

So, the pi is $80. That is without a case, power supply, or hard drive. Once you add these things to the Pi, you are into the $100-200 price range. At that point, you can just get an old desktop or a micro desktop. There are some youtube videos about it. I think they are maybe twice as big as a pi, but have intel processors in them.

They will be cheaper or similar in price and have better performance.

I just use an old desktop that has a 4th gen i5 and it runs significantly better than the pi4 does. Plus, I can just throw all my drives in the case and not need to worry about USB connected drives.

Also, I recommend Jellyfin over Plex.

skarn@discuss.tchncs.de on 29 Sep 2023 18:07 collapse

The problem with that is the power consumption. It adds up.

M500@lemmy.ml on 30 Sep 2023 00:34 collapse

I guess, it’s not going to be a huge difference when you factor in using a bunch of hard drives.

The raspberry pi has its place for sure, but those micropcs are probably a better deal for most people who want them for home use.

bitwolf@lemmy.one on 29 Sep 2023 06:02 next collapse

I use a J5040-ITX ATM. I know it says Pentium but don’t take that for granted. This chip is really just a lower binned i3 throttled enough to be passively cooled.

I run Plex as a docker-compose workload and bind mount /dev/dri which passes Intels quick sync accelerator into the container for Plex to use.

This enabled hw encoding. I also make sure I can direct stream from all of my clients. This setup can handle a few 4k streams and several 1080p streams.

I mainly use it hoard to losseless music and hard to find cartoons / movies.

I have an upgrade to a Pi Cluster planned but I don’t recommend it unless you specifically want to run Pis.

dammitBobby@lemm.ee on 29 Sep 2023 14:31 collapse

Any Intel CPU 8th gen or newer with quick sync can do like 20 simultaneous 1080p transcodes. You could get a Celeron and have a powerful plex box. Look up guides for the HP 290 as a starting place.

the_lone_wolf@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 01:32 collapse

4k decoding still drops frames, hardware is capable but drivers are not right now

Coelacanthus@lemmy.kde.social on 29 Sep 2023 01:04 next collapse

OpenGL 3.1 and Vulkan 1.2 in 2023? It’s so terrible!

the_lone_wolf@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 01:17 next collapse

It’s not “opengl 3.1” it’s “opengl es 3.1” which stand for embedded system and roughly equals to OpenGL 4.3 spec.

Coelacanthus@lemmy.kde.social on 29 Sep 2023 02:26 collapse

Oh, my bad. But OpenGL ES 3.1 and Vulkan 1.2 is also not suitable to 2023. Hope the developers can make driver support Vulkan 1.3.

the_lone_wolf@lemmy.ml on 29 Sep 2023 10:04 collapse

They did mention that gpu has open source mesa driver support

Helmic@hexbear.net on 29 Sep 2023 10:27 collapse

It’s the lack of hardware AV1 that concerns me, as well as droppong h.264. Raw CPU means it’ll still handle the latter, but since streaming will be moving to AV1 it’s kind of questionable whether this will be a reasonable media center.

combat_brandonism@hexbear.net on 29 Sep 2023 18:05 next collapse

reminder that rpi is pro cop: nitter.net/molly0xFFF/status/1601037628450959360?…

snugglesthefalse@sh.itjust.works on 29 Sep 2023 18:26 next collapse

That’s probably the smallest problem here

pascal@lemm.ee on 29 Sep 2023 19:18 collapse

Look, I’m already sold.

JamesConeZone@hexbear.net on 29 Sep 2023 19:36 collapse

<img alt="cringe" src="https://www.hexbear.net/pictrs/image/55c9f173-948c-4140-be5b-6aad2ac9cbf3.png">

Monsieur_bleu@hexbear.net on 29 Sep 2023 19:45 next collapse

ACAB means ACAB, come on

MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca on 29 Sep 2023 22:44 next collapse

There’s a lot of people in this discussion taking about how raspberry Pi and the pi foundation isn’t worth your money, whether on principle, or just dollars per unit of compute.

I get it, but I have a question. Is there a competing SBC that has official PoE support? I know there’s half baked ways to sort that out separate from the device, but I have a few edge cases where the last viable option was the pi 3B+. The official pi 4 case is horrendous for airflow, and third party cases usually either assume you want no protection (and all the airflow) or you want to handle thermals by contact pads passively (making it difficult or impossible to use the PoE hat), or are just as bad as the stock case for airflow, but they have enough room inside to add a hat, in which case, why go third party when the official case is equally terrible?

The pi 3 had a PoE hat, and a case you could take the top off and get decent airflow. Too bad the fans in the first gen PoE hat are unicorns in terms of power draw, with no way to adjust the power curve for the fan connector to suit a different fan, and since they’re unicorns, you can’t find them for purchase, and if you find something remarkably similar, they’re still slightly different enough that they don’t work (I’ve tried). So the fans burn out and IDK, good fucking luck I guess. Buy a new PoE hat?

Then there was the gen 2 PoE+ hat which released alongside the pi 4, which supposedly works with the 3 as well, which I haven’t tried yet, but I’m planning to.

In every case, I have done network monitoring and service nodes that aren’t exactly local to a power receptacle and they need PoE. The pi 4 eliminated itself because of the garbage case design of the official case and the lack of thought by those doing the third party cases… so I’m looking at the 5 like, finally, they got it right.

Now everyone is talking shit about the pi foundation, which I can completely understand, but for the application I need these for (and my pi 3’s have been in service for like ~5 years and probably need to be refreshed), what other option do I have? What’s decent with a good case and PoE input? PoE or PoE+ doesn’t matter, I just need to be able to package it up into a relatively small footprint for the application.

Anyone have any suggestions? I’m all ears. I’ve googled till I’m blue in the face and I can’t even find an SBC that has an option for PoE, I never got to looking into whether it has a decent case or if it will run my software…

Trainzkid@lemmy.ml on 30 Sep 2023 09:06 collapse

“we notice everyone is having trouble getting our previous model due to scalpers, so we released a new version at double the price!”

/s