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The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4S is a SODIMM-style version of the Compute Module 4. It has the same processor as the standard model, but the form factor restricts the I/O capabilities, so it’s ...
How cool is this? An excellent RetroPie-based enclosure, in a Switch Lite form factor, built around the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4. The Raspberry Pi team take up the story here, of the work of the ...
Raspberry Pi has bucked tech industry trends and cut prices for the 4 GB and 8 GB variants of its Compute Module 4.… The Compute Module 4 (CM4) debuted in 2020 and was a departure from the DDR2 ...
Folks have been cramming Raspberry Pi computers into handheld cases to create their own Game Boy clones for years. But the Retroflag GPi case lets you do it without a soldering iron, dremel, or 3D ...
The latest Compute module, based on the Raspberry Pi 4, runs a 64-bit ARM Cortex-A72 CPU with built-in memory (up to 8GB) and storage (up to 32GB). The board also supports wifi via an included ...
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module has passed through two iterations since its launch in 2014, but probably due to the lower cost of a retail Raspberry Pi we haven’t seen it in many projects save ...
5Compute Module 3 Ramps Up the Processing Power According to the Raspberry Pi Foundation, Compute Module 3 ships with an ARM BCM2837 processor with up to 1.2GHz clock speed.
The new Compute Module contains the guts of a Raspberry Pi 3, featuring a 64-bit Broadcom BCM2837 processor at up to 1.2GHz with 1GB RAM, and 4GB flash storage.
At $29, the SOPINE A64 roughly matches the price of the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3, which ranges from $25 to $30. The new SOPINE will ship in February, according to the website.
The Compute Module, which is intended for industrial applications, was first released in April 2014 with the same CPU as the first-generation Raspberry Pi.
The new Compute Module is based on the BCM2837 processor – the same as found in the Raspberry Pi 3 – running at 1.2 GHz with 1 gigabyte of RAM.