Built on the same form factor as all of its Raspberry Pi Zero predecessors, the Zero 2 W is up to five times as fast as the original Zero. The Zero 2 W boasts a quad-core 64-bit Arm Cortex-A53 ...
The Raspberry Pi has a rich history of developments since the first model shipped in 2012. Each generation has improved computing power and connectivity options, making it useful for demanding DIY ...
The diminutive Raspberry Pi Zero is getting its first upgrade in nearly five years. Today, Raspberry Pi founder Eben Upton announced the Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W, a new $15 product that puts the ...
Over the years, we’ve seen a steady stream of updates for the Raspberry Pi Foundation’s flagship single-board computer (SBC), with each new release representing a significant boost in processing power ...
DIY electronics boards are getting cheaper and cheaper. Since the launch of the Raspberry Pi, the extremely popular, portable computer-on-a-board, countless new boards have shown up. Even so, few are ...
The Radxa Cubie A7Z is a single-board computer with an Allwinner A733 processor that combines ARM Cortex-A76 CPU and Cortex-A55 cores with an Imagination GPU and a low-power RISC-V core, and an NPU ...
Despite its size -- a mere 65mm by 30mm by 5mm -- the Zero has a core that's 40 percent faster then the original Pi 1. "We really don't think we're going to get any cheaper than this," said Eben Upton ...
Rumors about a new Raspberry Pi have been circulating around the Internet for the past week or so. Speculation has ranged from an upgraded Model A or compute module to a monster board with Gigabit ...
The Raspberry Pi company is best known for its main eponymous product line, now in its fourth incarnation (and also getting a little pricier, at least temporarily). But there are all sorts of ...
MangoPi’s latest single-board computer is a Raspberry Pi Zero clone called the MangoPi MQ Quad. It features a quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 processor, 1GB of RAM, a microSD card reader, USB Type-C and mini ...
The Raspberry Pi has long been the hobbyist choice for DIY electronics projects. The Raspberry Pi Zero, which is about the size of a stick of gum, and just five bucks has it’s own special use cases ...