Since the Raspberry Pi will be with us soon-ish (well, about six weeks I am told, for mine) does anyone have any interesting ideas about what they might do with it/them?
I've heard of car computers, TV boxes, PBCes as ideas...
Since the Raspberry Pi will be with us soon-ish (well, about six weeks I am told, for mine) does anyone have any interesting ideas about what they might do with it/them?
I've heard of car computers, TV boxes, PBCes as ideas...
PBC => PBX
a micro low power NAS
-
All of that I can do with a nicely cased repurposed thin client PC. And there are thousands of those scrapped at prices next to nothing.
I think (but hope not) a number of them are destined to a place in a lonely drawer shared with long lost dusty socks and broken iPods...
of which I have several but they are watt graspers unlike the pi - already have 3 lower power media players, a low power NAS - home monitoring server with internet access .........
In message , Bob Eager writes
You know that table that was never quite stable ...
Well, the RP has a quarter of a gigabyte of memory and a reasonably powerful CPU. And a place to attach keyboard, mouse and display. So it's a bit more than a development board.
Angle grinder speed controler, duct tape/WD40 dispenser, combi boiler quantity calculator.
It's still boggling my brain how many people seem to have bought one and have absolutely no clue what they're actually going to do with it. Was the marketing hype really *that* good?
Well, start here.... first we need a case.
discussion here.
It maybe needs something like this to make it a decent toy -
Or is the price simply that low? It's almost disposable - so why not get one then worry about what to do with it?
(yes, I know the answer - it adds to the house full of crap, which is why I won't be getting one till I think of something useful :-) )
I'm not quite sure what the purpose of this machine is. Low cost? Once you've added a monitor, keyboard, mouse, memory (and a PSU?), it won't be far from the cost of a netbook. (Edit: just seen that it plugs into a TV. Still, you need a spare TV...)
And what's special about it that it took six years to develop? (I used to build prototype computer boards in a week or so.)
Yebut, you have to make allowances, t'was "designed" by bods at a Uni, says it all, really.
How about for applications where you don't need a monitor, keyboard, mouse, extra memory? Think automation, control, robots, etc.
The cost is probably what's special about it. There's a lot of work in there, probably a significant amount being negotiation rather than simply technical.
000, Bob Eager wrote:
Sounds ike one of Acorns earlier efforts, took em on to the BBC Micro and Risc which brings full circle to the RP...
Which involved half a day of typing to shoot a full stop from an inverted V at traveling X`s...
If you were lucky had a C2N or , now highly collectable small keyboard PET with the built in cassette drive, the seriously rich had the 8" shugart floppy.
Been a while since you looked at current dev kits, Arduino has taken off in a big way, with even GUI based programming methods aimed at the under 10`s, getting a stepper motor moving is a plug in` shield` and bolt together `sketch` of code...
Rasperry PI has onboarrd keyboard mouse and probably crucially HDMI out, it costs the same as cheap video card but has the rest of the P.C. attached, can see it gaining big traction in markets where networked screens are used...
Extra I/O in similar format is an obvious aftermarket.
Cheers Adam
That reminds me, must phone CPC and tell em that I really did want one, that is why I ordered it!
Media streamer would be one obvious one.
Home automation / monitoring and instrumenting would be a nice option.
Souped up lego mindstorm controller
One could no a nice retro system emulation and build the whole thing into a joystick etc.
Kind of reminds me of Uncle clive and his use the zx 81 to control a nuclear power station ideas. The point I think is to get people to learn the language of python or however its spelled. Its very powerful, but not that intuitive like a good basic could provide to get the kids sucked in. Brian
HomeOwnersHub website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.