Tickling the fancy of tinkerers, the Raspberry Pi is a tiny circuit board with memory, a CPU, and several I/O connectors. It has long promised to offer anyone access to the building blocks of computer ...
Sales of cheap, credit card-sized units top 5m says company, eclipsing the Sinclair ZX Spectrum in the 1980s Over 5m Raspberry Pis have been sold since its inception in 2012, making it the best ...
Dr Eben Upton of the Raspberry Pi Foundation shows Rory Cellan-Jones how the computer works The hope of Britain's future computer science industry is gathered around a tiny device in a school ...
A whole computer contained in a keyboard - just connect it to a monitor and you are ready to go. It sounds like an idea from the 1980s. Remember the ZX Spectrum, the Commodore Amiga or the BBC Micro?
More than a million Raspberry Pi computers have been made in Britain, with 1.75m sold globally since going on sale for around £30 in February 2012. The initial batch of the credit card-sized barebones ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 is a compact desktop computer that combines a 2.4 GHz Broadcom BC2712 quad-core ARM Cortex-A76 processor, 8GB of LPDDR4x-4267 memory, and support for WiFi 5, Bluetooth 5.0, and ...
March 2012 saw the launch of a new computing device, the Raspberry Pi, Model B. Drawing inspiration from the early days of computing in schools, the Raspberry Pi has expanded way beyond low-cost ...
The original Raspberry Pi, released seven years ago, was a big bet – why buy a computer when you can build one yourself? Luckily, that bet has paid off. The tiny credit card-sized computer has sold ...
The RootBoard is a handheld computer kit with a 3.5 inch color display, a 70-key thumb keyboard complete with function keys, and a built-in speaker plus what looks like a decent s ...
The Raspberry Pi, a credit-card sized computer designed to encourage children to learn programming, caught the imagination of millions when it was unveiled in February. The website where it was ...
The Raspberry Pi 5 is a powerful machine, but the foundation may need to shift its direction to keep up with the times.