https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
More technical details here: https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/introducing-raspberry-pi-5/
All very interesting, but:
"RP1 is our I/O controller for Raspberry Pi 5"
So:
Raspberry Pi 1 = first models of Raspberry Pi.
RP1 = a chip on the Raspberry Pi 5 board.
I'm increasingly thinking that the Raspberry Pi people like being
confusing.
Only 4 Core Cortex A76 (no Cortex-A55 cores). I think the A76 is the
fast core, so, I guess, mainly a loss of energy efficiency when
idle(ish). Given the Orange Pi5 (with 4xA76 + 4xA55) is 1-2 watts at
idle, there might be room to play with. i.e I'm disappointed it isn't 8
core, but it might be a good pragmatic choice.
I think, no storage apart from micro SD, no (SATA, NVME), but I quite
like micro SD.
The big thing for me will be the GPU and driver, VideoCore VII GPU. In comparison, drivers for the Orange Pi5 GPU, the Mali 610, are
problematic, stunning when they work, but due to GPU driver problems, my
oPi5 is currently stuck on a 6-month-old version of Armbian, with
updates turned off.
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Richard Kettlewell wrote:
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Jeff Geerling video
<https://youtu.be/nBtOEmUqASQ>
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
Richard Kettlewell wrote:
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Jeff Geerling video
<https://youtu.be/nBtOEmUqASQ>
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
The big thing for me will be the GPU and driver, VideoCore VII GPU. In
comparison, drivers for the Orange Pi5 GPU, the Mali 610, are
problematic, stunning when they work, but due to GPU driver problems, my
oPi5 is currently stuck on a 6-month-old version of Armbian, with
updates turned off.
If they mainline their Mesa drivers (as the VC4 is) I expect the Videocore will be as easy to use as say an Intel integrated GPU (although perhaps not as featureful).
Mali started off with closed source drivers from Arm. The open source Panfrost project supports some Mali GPUs, but it seems not the G610: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/8054
On 28/09/2023 09:26, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
All very interesting, but:
"RP1 is our I/O controller for Raspberry Pi 5"
So:
Raspberry Pi 1 = first models of Raspberry Pi.
RP1 = a chip on the Raspberry Pi 5 board.
I'm increasingly thinking that the Raspberry Pi people like being
confusing.
There never was a Raspberry Pi 1.
The first iterations were Pi B and Pi A, followed by B+ and A+
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
On 28/09/2023 08:53, Richard Kettlewell wrote:
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
I wonder whether this time it will have an incredibly trivial but useful thing that is lacking from the present Pi 3 and 4: a power LED which
*goes out when the Pi is shutdown*. I use my Pis headless, via VNC, and
when I shutdown a Pi I never know when it is safe to turn the power off because the red LED remains lit all the time that USB power is applied.
I have to look for absence of green disk-activity LED and hope...
I hope also they've fixed the evil problem that the Pi 4 has (which the
Pi 3 didn't) relating to a powered USB hub for driving a spinning HDD.
I've tried two different hubs and found that the Pi hangs indefinitely
during booting if the hub and the HDD are powered on at the same time as
the Pi, rather than being powered on before the Pi is booted. The simultaneous power-on happens if there is a power cut and then the power comes back on. I found that as soon as the USB lead was unplugged or the
hub was power-cycled after the Pi had hung, booting would continue.
I wonder whether this time it will have an incredibly trivial but useful thing that is lacking from the present Pi 3 and 4: a power LED which *goes out when the Pi is shutdown*.
With it came a small program (running below the OS) which controlled a
relais which would than disconnect the power to the RPi. An ATX style powerbutton combo if you will.
You could try and see if you could only use the software part, and instead
of driving a relais connecting to a simple LED.
https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/raspberry-pi-5/
Scroll down for specs.
I wonder whether this time it will have an incredibly trivial but useful thing that is lacking from the present Pi 3 and 4: a power LED which
*goes out when the Pi is shutdown*. I use my Pis headless, via VNC, and
when I shutdown a Pi I never know when it is safe to turn the power off because the red LED remains lit all the time that USB power is applied.
I have to look for absence of green disk-activity LED and hope...
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