I posted a while ago about the Raspberry PI, a tiny credit-card sized computer designed by some clever geeks here in Britain which is now taking the world by storm..
I actually purchased one of these as soon as they were available to order to see what all the fuss is about and after waiting 3 months they finally arrived.. I say they because they sent me TWO by mistake. One of them came with an attractive specially designed housing case which is available in black, white or clear (I received the white one).
Here's some pics for those interested..
This is the actual unit with a typical USB wifi dongle next to it for size comparison:
Fitted inside the housing with the SD card containing the operating system:
A diagram of the circuit showing the ports:
Here it is hooked up to my old analogue TV:
When I initially saw these advertised I had loads of ideas about what I could do with it, now I've got the thing I can't even find a single use for it!
Since it runs off 5.7v, in theory, it could be used on a bicycle for something (if you can think of anything useful to do with it!)..you could power it off your e-bike battery using a cheap voltage inverter (I got the idea from d8vh). But I'm still not sure what you would actually use it for on a bicycle..anyone have any suggestions?
It's actually not as fast as you would expect it to be on booting it up. With no hard drive,
you would expect it to be almost "instant on" like the low-powered pocket PCs that run Windows CE and Windows Mobile.. not the case, the Raspberry takes 30 seconds to boot up! However, once it's booted it's quite a fast and capable little computer with 512MB ram on-board and a 700Mhz ARM processor.
The advantage over other pocket PC's (which you can pick up much cheaper than the Raspberry on eBay) is that it is USB ports, analogue video-out and obviously much more flexibility with the OS due to running Linux.
After getting a HTC Desire mobile phone recently (one of the best things I ever bought) I think Android and smartphones have made micro PC's like the Raspberry and Windows pocket PCs pretty much obsolete.. there isn't much you can't do with Android apps is there? The only limitation is the lack of USB really.
I actually purchased one of these as soon as they were available to order to see what all the fuss is about and after waiting 3 months they finally arrived.. I say they because they sent me TWO by mistake. One of them came with an attractive specially designed housing case which is available in black, white or clear (I received the white one).
Here's some pics for those interested..
This is the actual unit with a typical USB wifi dongle next to it for size comparison:
Fitted inside the housing with the SD card containing the operating system:
A diagram of the circuit showing the ports:
Here it is hooked up to my old analogue TV:
When I initially saw these advertised I had loads of ideas about what I could do with it, now I've got the thing I can't even find a single use for it!
Since it runs off 5.7v, in theory, it could be used on a bicycle for something (if you can think of anything useful to do with it!)..you could power it off your e-bike battery using a cheap voltage inverter (I got the idea from d8vh). But I'm still not sure what you would actually use it for on a bicycle..anyone have any suggestions?
It's actually not as fast as you would expect it to be on booting it up. With no hard drive,
you would expect it to be almost "instant on" like the low-powered pocket PCs that run Windows CE and Windows Mobile.. not the case, the Raspberry takes 30 seconds to boot up! However, once it's booted it's quite a fast and capable little computer with 512MB ram on-board and a 700Mhz ARM processor.
The advantage over other pocket PC's (which you can pick up much cheaper than the Raspberry on eBay) is that it is USB ports, analogue video-out and obviously much more flexibility with the OS due to running Linux.
After getting a HTC Desire mobile phone recently (one of the best things I ever bought) I think Android and smartphones have made micro PC's like the Raspberry and Windows pocket PCs pretty much obsolete.. there isn't much you can't do with Android apps is there? The only limitation is the lack of USB really.
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