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I may have to get one to play with but the lack of onboard ethernet is a limitation for the sorts of use I already put several Raspberry Pis to.
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It won't be able to play CoD whatever it's called.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.--Ernest Hemingway
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Pi and Chip or CoD and Chip?
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People will buy/buy into any old [censored] these days. Thanks but I'll stick with my PCs and Laptops.
AAISP Home::1
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We're at the point where we can have a fully-functioning PC on a circuit board the size of a credit card. Just add a monitor, mouse, keyboard and (optional) external storage. The only limiting factor is the size of the connectors, and soon the computer will cost less than the cables.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.--Ernest Hemingway
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That's the size of the new Macbook Air circuit board. The rest of the case is battery.
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People will buy/buy into any old [censored] these days. Thanks but I'll stick with my PCs and Laptops.
I think you're missing the point slightly, most of these don't get sold to run as a replacement for your pc, they tend to be used in electronics projects or as controllers for other bits of kit.
Or in the case of the PI it's actually very good at playing HD video and I hear with the CPU upgrades the PI2 got the UI lag that the PI had when running Kodi is no longer an issue.
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Schools use these to educate children in the art of programming and are cheap as chips.
Might get them to design a GUI that is better than W8 and variants.
Was Eclipse Home Option 1, VM 2Mb & O2 Standard
Now Utility Warehouse (up to 16mbps) via Talk Talk
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They designed it so that each student could have their own memory card with the operating system and their software and data on it. All that they need to do is insert it into a Pi and boot. Brilliant!
Why, then, did they switch from the SD format to micro-SD when they designed the Pi 2? They are amazingly easy to mislay and impossible to identify. Gah!
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.--Ernest Hemingway
@micksharpe
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Schools use these to educate children in the art of programming and are cheap as chips.
Might get them to design a GUI that is better than W8 and variants.
Schools already have PCs which the kids can program on, these are simply spending money on something they could have done with existing equipment, which would be superior anyway.
AAISP Home::1
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Why, then, did they switch from the SD format to micro-SD when they designed the Pi 2? They are amazingly easy to mislay and impossible to identify. Gah!
They didn't - the switch occurred when the Pi B+ came out, followed by the A+ and then the Pi2B
It incurs a cost for those making the change, but avoids the problems with the SD connector (I've had to have three changed, so far, for a more rugged connector - but this still leaves a vulnerability point where a dropped Pi with SD card plugged in can break the SD card (quite easily)
Derek
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Thanks for that. I always wondered why they made the change. Now, if only they would move to a USB 3.0 bus. Apparently, the developers are not interested since it would mean using a different SoC. Still, I love this little device.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.--Ernest Hemingway
@micksharpe
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From what I've read, the designers try to balance cost and performance. I think they did a good job with that. The added cost to redo the whole thing for usb3.0 was probably balanced against the number of benefits.
I personally have no usb 3.0 stuff yet
Derek
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A USB 3.0 bus would be really sweet. Running external disk drives limits their speed to around 35 megabytes per second. Also, the ethernet interface is run off the USB bus which is why gigabit ethernet is not supported. I'm not sure how the SD card is connected but I wouldn't be surprised if it is hung off the USB bus as well. I imagine that the real reason is that Broadcom do not want to make more powerful chips available to a charitable organisation, but the RPi foundation is not allowed to say so.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.--Ernest Hemingway
@micksharpe
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