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mod sassinator posted:Huh? They're going to sell it at Newegg and Microcenter, so it's not some closed thing. Fixed my post. Thank you.
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# ? Mar 31, 2014 00:49 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:57 |
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mod sassinator posted:Huh? They're going to sell it at Newegg and Microcenter, so it's not some closed thing. It exposes the standard OpenGL pipelines and such as well, you can certainly use the GPU for normal things without the CUDA API and you should be able to slap XBMC on it just fine. And the fact that it can run CUDA is actually a pretty big deal, it's the most mature GPU API out there. Sucks that the Pro version won't be sold to consumers, though, I didn't realize that. Amberskin posted:192 cores at 192 dollars... Definitely not in the same league as the Rpi. Not even the same league as the Cubietruck. Agreed, both on price and in capability. 192 Kepler cores isn't a ton in comparison to high-end gaming GPUs or compute cards, but it's in the same ballpark as entry-level desktop GPU, like the GT630 which also has 192 cores, and the thing has a 10W TDP. Should be capable of doing some pretty serious games right out of the box (NVIDIA demoed it running Unreal Engine 4), and NVIDIA is better about driver support than the steaming pile Broadcom squeezed out. Runs Ubuntu 13.04. On that note the open-source drivers for the Raspberry Pi are finally moving along, someone got Quake 3 running and won the prize. Its competition is more the Parallela than the Raspberry Pi, and it stacks up pretty well there. That's the use I see for this - it'll be for applications more intensive than web-browsing/word-processing/media PC desktop work or babysit-a-USB-device NAS-type work. It'll probably be capable of stuff like real-time compression, machine vision, etc with GPU assistance, and it's already running Unreal Engine 4. CUDA acceleration is really powerful (the GPU is 10x as powerful as a Parallela, or roughly 100x as powerful as the Rpi CPU), the code will be way more portable than Parallela, and it offers a semi-unified memory architecture which is really nice. Additionally, you can do more sustained throughput because of the mini-PCI-e/USB 3.0/SATA and because they're not trying to use USB as a system bus. In that sense it'll be a lot more like a APU system than the Rpi. You should also be able to build some interesting hardware configurations with this. e: Performance should be roughly comparable to the PS3 or Xbox 360, or a Core i5-4200u/Intel HD 4400, a mid-2013 Haswell ULV chip. 4K video can be decoded at 30fps and encoded at 24fps, 1080p decoded at 120fps and encoded at 60fps. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 22:10 on Mar 31, 2014 |
# ? Mar 31, 2014 18:12 |
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So in theory we should now be capable of running Android on the Pi since their big hurdle was hardware decoding? Even if it is an outdated version of Android, having an OS that was designed for and has a library of applications based around touch screens is a great thing for stuff like car builds.
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# ? Mar 31, 2014 23:04 |
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YouTuber posted:So in theory we should now be capable of running Android on the Pi since their big hurdle was hardware decoding? Even if it is an outdated version of Android, having an OS that was designed for and has a library of applications based around touch screens is a great thing for stuff like car builds. Possibly, but a lot of stuff is still not going to work right given the compromises that had to be made.
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# ? Mar 31, 2014 23:08 |
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http://www.raspberrypi.org/ Ugh god they went full mid 90s on their webpage. Black background with green font.
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 12:58 |
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YouTuber posted:http://www.raspberrypi.org/ Mid 90s? It looks like an IBM 3279 display! Complete with underlined, double height and bold characters. Fortunately, they have not used blink. And you can't say it is 90-ish because there is no "under construction" animated GIF
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 14:02 |
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1. Website is optimized for use on a raspberry pi now. Too true. Looks great in links
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 16:13 |
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Lets see here - the new site boasts "ASCII art for the new millennium" and "Tastes of electric limes when licked". They also plan to use the site "to repel new customers from now on". New site went live at 12:01 am. On April 1st. Yep.
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 16:18 |
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CollegeCop posted:Lets see here - the new site boasts "ASCII art for the new millennium" and "Tastes of electric limes when licked". They also plan to use the site "to repel new customers from now on". I just thought it was web 3.0. Isn't retro cool again?
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 17:24 |
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deong posted:I just thought it was web 3.0. Isn't retro cool again? Of course it is! And, speaking of retro, I use my raspis mostly to emulate old systems. I'm not talking about consoles or home computers, but about really old systems, like PDP-8, PDP-10, PDP-11, VAXen and some even older IBM stuff (709x, 1401, 1350...). I wonder if there is enough interest about those things to deserve an specific thread about retrocomputing. And, being relatively new in SA I'm not sure about how such a thread should be created without being gas-chambered on sight.
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 18:25 |
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Amberskin posted:Of course it is! SHSC is pretty fine with making a new thread as long as it doesn't suck. Put some effort into the first post and I bet it will gain some interest. I wouldn't mind reading about and seeing some screenshots/pics of what you are playing with.
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 20:10 |
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Moey posted:SHSC is pretty fine with making a new thread as long as it doesn't suck. Put some effort into the first post and I bet it will gain some interest. The Linux thread is literally a few links and is from 2007 so the bar isn't exactly set high around here.
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# ? Apr 1, 2014 21:54 |
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quote:RASPBERRY PI COMPUTE MODULE: NEW PRODUCT!
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# ? Apr 7, 2014 21:53 |
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As someone wrote in the comments, it's just question of time before we have a board ready to plug in several of these Raspi-C's to form a RaspiBlade or a RaspiCluster. The only drawback imho is it has no NIC.
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# ? Apr 7, 2014 22:41 |
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I dunno, I really don't see the appeal of using the Pi as a webserver or computing node for anything serious. You can spin up some insane multicore and even fancy compute GPU machines on AWS in seconds and only pay for the amount of time you use them. As a webserver the Pi is going to be about as good as something from 10 years ago, so it will serve some static pages fine but not really have enough memory to do much intensive stuff. A Xeon or even core i7 will likely have much better computing power per area with its 4+ cores and hyperthreading--easily handling the load of 8+ Pis in an area less than the size of a single Pi.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 00:17 |
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The Pi server blade appeal is basically inexperienced people who have it as their first experience, and now that they have this hammer....
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 00:19 |
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I wonder what gets destroyed when you plug it into the laptop. The laptop, the Pi, or both? edit: I can't think what I'd use it for, but I think this is pretty badass, for the record. It's an even smaller, deployable Pi with an included dev board.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 01:07 |
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mod sassinator posted:I dunno, I really don't see the appeal of using the Pi as a webserver or computing node for anything serious. You can spin up some insane multicore and even fancy compute GPU machines on AWS in seconds and only pay for the amount of time you use them. As a webserver the Pi is going to be about as good as something from 10 years ago, so it will serve some static pages fine but not really have enough memory to do much intensive stuff. A Xeon or even core i7 will likely have much better computing power per area with its 4+ cores and hyperthreading--easily handling the load of 8+ Pis in an area less than the size of a single Pi. Which is why it was heralded as the next BBC Micro, and then it wasn't. Plenty of people have done cool stuff with it, but it's more of an alternative to a beaglebone/arduino than a groundbreaking learning tool. I'm pretty sure I've read that it's a big hit in Africa/other poorer nations, so there is that.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 03:47 |
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mod sassinator posted:I dunno, I really don't see the appeal of using the Pi as a webserver or computing node for anything serious. You can spin up some insane multicore and even fancy compute GPU machines on AWS in seconds and only pay for the amount of time you use them. As a webserver the Pi is going to be about as good as something from 10 years ago, so it will serve some static pages fine but not really have enough memory to do much intensive stuff. A Xeon or even core i7 will likely have much better computing power per area with its 4+ cores and hyperthreading--easily handling the load of 8+ Pis in an area less than the size of a single Pi. EC2 costs as much as a pi per month. It's a terrible learning environment. The pi is a bad compute node or webserver, but it's a reasonable embedded appliance. EC2 isn't in the same market at all
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 06:15 |
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evol262 posted:EC2 costs as much as a pi per month. It's a terrible learning environment. The pi is a bad compute node or webserver, but it's a reasonable embedded appliance. EC2 isn't in the same market at all Yeah I agree, the Pi alone is an awesome device. Putting a dozen Pi's into a cluster or blade system doesn't make any sense to me.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 11:03 |
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mod sassinator posted:Yeah I agree, the Pi alone is an awesome device. Putting a dozen Pi's into a cluster or blade system doesn't make any sense to me. Because learning clustering on EC2 is ludicrously expensive. The pi will never be a match for blades, but a smaller form factor lets you slot an pi in as the brains if embedded devices which need more resources than atmels, but still don't need the other bits of the pi (gpio headers, HDMI, composite, Ethernet, whatever).
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 14:17 |
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evol262 posted:Because learning clustering on EC2 is ludicrously expensive. Yeah, I think they are mostly doing this for people that want to design niche commercial devices based on the BCM2835 the Pi uses. Since Broadcom is so swell and won't sell you one unless you order in units of 100,000 and everything.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 14:22 |
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More than anything, I hope this blows open the market for cheap, well-distributed SOMs like the Pi opened a market for cheap Linux-capable dev-boards. Right now, the vast majority of SOMs cost over $100, and can't be purchased through Digikey, Mouser, et cetera. I'd love to see that change.
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# ? Apr 8, 2014 14:27 |
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hifi posted:Which is why it was heralded as the next BBC Micro, and then it wasn't. Plenty of people have done cool stuff with it, but it's more of an alternative to a beaglebone/arduino than a groundbreaking learning tool. It's nice for people who want to set up a computer lab in "rustic" conditions, because Pis have a low TDP, no moving parts, and run off a low-voltage DC source (eg a battery system). But a lot of people in Africa and other poor countries do have access to computers, it's called a smartphone and old ones are pretty cheap even there. The things a Pi does that a smartphone doesn't tend to relate to programming and other educational tasks. And if you need a desktop there's cyber cafes (notoriously so, lots of internet scams run out of them). So it's nice for schools and such, because you can stand up a computer lab cheaply and in some bad conditions, but a lot of the other needs are covered or niche enough that the Pi isn't a huge deal. This is my understanding at least. The fact that the initial revision of the Raspberry Pi had hardware flaws that exacerbated critical software bugs that may remain unfixed 2 years after launch probably didn't help the Pi not becoming the next BBC micro either. A flaw in the USB stack is a critical bug in a system that's architectured using USB as a system bus, and they just sat on their hands and got real indignant when people implied that losing USB packets was actually a bug. The advantage of the Pi over cheap chinese SOCs was supposed to be support and that just didn't pan out. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 23:50 on Apr 8, 2014 |
# ? Apr 8, 2014 22:48 |
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Maybe this form factor would be good for devices that need a computer or controller board with some GPIO functionality to control them, like 3D printers or CNC rigs. A barebones laptop also comes to mind. It'd be really cool if other manufacturers like Beagleboard copy the pinout so that people could buy devices with a slot for a small controller/computer and pick what board suits their needs and upgrade as needed.
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# ? Apr 9, 2014 00:18 |
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I've got a laptop with a dead mobo but everything else is fine (display, keyboard, trackpad). Any pointers on how to add the pi in to make a pi laptop? There is a kit you can get on eBay to get the display connected, but the keyboard connector might be a bridge too far! Anyone here had any luck?
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# ? Apr 10, 2014 00:55 |
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fliptophead posted:I've got a laptop with a dead mobo but everything else is fine (display, keyboard, trackpad). Any pointers on how to add the pi in to make a pi laptop? There is a kit you can get on eBay to get the display connected, but the keyboard connector might be a bridge too far! Anyone here had any luck? The keyboards are almost always USB (on a ribbon cable, of course), but even if it's old and PS/2, you can wire it to a converter. Ditto for the trackpad. The LVDS ribbon will be your biggest hurdle, along with backlight control, etc.
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# ? Apr 10, 2014 01:20 |
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evol262 posted:The keyboards are almost always USB (on a ribbon cable, of course), but even if it's old and PS/2, you can wire it to a converter. Ditto for the trackpad. The LVDS ribbon will be your biggest hurdle, along with backlight control, etc. Oh really? That's actually pretty good news then! This is the kit I'm looking at for the display connection, which seems to cover off on most of the issues. http://www.ebay.com/itm/M-NT68676-2...=item1c33990645 Still looks like it will be a painful process...
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# ? Apr 10, 2014 01:28 |
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Yesterday I got my replacement BB (Beaglebone Black), two months after returning my first one. The USB interface of the old one died without apparent reason (the BB was unpowered for a while and when I tried to power it back on it stopped to work), so I RTMd without problem (except for the wait time). Just as a heads up, there is now a native debian build to replace the "native" Angstrom, and it seems TI plans to offer BBs with the EMMC flashed with this distro. Which is good. Right now there is an image you can easily flash into the SD and another which should be flashable to the emmc. I'm running from the SD now, and it is A-OK. I didn't remember this card has LOTS of GPIOs. Now I just have to thing about a project to use it
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# ? Apr 10, 2014 10:37 |
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Cool, sounds like you got rev C. Here's an update I got from makertronic March 31: "As of 4pm today, we were notified by CircuitCo that they are stopping production of the BeagleBone Black Rev B units, due to a memory shortage. They are beginning production of the Rev C BeagleBone Blacks that will have 4GB of eMMC Flash and come preloaded with Debian Linux. With the increase in flash also comes a $10 increase in price. BeagleBone Black Rev C units will be $55 each. We have been assured by CircuitCo that we will be able to ship all remaining backorders for Rev B units. As of now we have disabled buying Rev B boards and created a pre-order for the Rev C units. Rev C until will not begin shipping until Apr 30th."
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# ? Apr 11, 2014 05:06 |
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Anyone know if the raspi runs freebsd reliably?
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 00:50 |
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keyvin posted:Anyone know if the raspi runs freebsd reliably? Get a beaglebone
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 04:41 |
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evol262 posted:Get a beaglebone Sold out everywhere. Looks like I am going to have to wait for the 30th.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 15:04 |
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keyvin posted:Sold out everywhere. Looks like I am going to have to wait for the 30th. Microcenter has them sitting on the shelf here if that's an option.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 15:43 |
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eddiewalker posted:Microcenter has them sitting on the shelf here if that's an option. I'd have to drive 110 miles to the closest Microcenter
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 16:23 |
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keyvin posted:Sold out everywhere. Looks like I am going to have to wait for the 30th. I was just at a Radio Shack (ugh) yesterday and saw they had a few Beaglebone Blacks on the shelf. The problem is they're in a starter kit and cost $89. http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=28805666
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 18:31 |
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mod sassinator posted:I was just at a Radio Shack (ugh) yesterday and saw they had a few Beaglebone Blacks on the shelf. The problem is they're in a starter kit and cost $89. http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=28805666 Can't say I want it that badly.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 19:57 |
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Question for those running a RasPi webserver: What's the best tutorial for starting this project? If I'm looking to run a webpage from a home connection, is there a recommended guide that can help me along the way? I've found a bunch of basic guides so far, but I'm specifically looking for one that puts an emphasis on locking down the thing for security purposes.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 20:08 |
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Linode's guide is good.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 20:10 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:57 |
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If anyone is curious freebsd runs on the Pi. It takes about a minute and a half to boot. The system is extremely sluggish. There isn't a repository for pkg to use meaning that everything would have to be compiled through ports unless I am missing something. Oh, it only successfully mounts the root file system every other boot or so. The keyboard sometimes stopped responding. Overall I would say that yes, you can install freebsd on the pi - but it isn't really usable. Hopefully the BBB is a lot better. Guess I'll find out in May.
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# ? Apr 15, 2014 20:21 |