• m-p{3}
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      11 months ago

      I wouldn’t expect that kind of price anymore except for the Zero models.

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          5611 months ago

          Yep. The initial idea was to have a cheap SBC, that you could give to an entire classroom without being worried too much if some of them break. 35€ are not exactly cheap, but doable. 80-90€ is simply not viable for that purpose anymore.

          At the same time, for more serious projects, it’s lacking too many features like sata, pcie, etc., etc.

          I feel like RPi is coasting on momentum, without a clear direction.

          • @grue
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            4911 months ago

            The initial idea was to have a cheap SBC, that you could give to an entire classroom without being worried too much if some of them break.

          • Norgur
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            811 months ago

            You know that RPi 5 actually does have PCIe, right?
            And you know that RPI Zero 2W is as fast as an Raspberry pi 3, so plenty fast for the purpose you described, right?

            And you know that the RPi 4 and 5 in particular are so fast that they can easily power your homelanb, 3d printer, smart home and NAS without breaking a sweat, right?

            • @[email protected]
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              2411 months ago

              Yet they’re still inferior to even older x86 hardware. You can pick up a used NUC (or similar) for less than a pi 4 and it blows it out of the water on performance, while using only marginally more power.

              • Norgur
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                -411 months ago

                Look, I don’t know why there is so much Opposition to the pi,.since it’s just one of many tools we have at our disposal to get stuff done the way we want it and I don’t get why there has to be an objective best all around solution. If the Pi is what you are looking for: buy that, it’s nice that it has the things it has, it’s relatively low power and it’s tiny. If you are looking for more, buy more.

                Of course there is faster stuff that’s older. For my setup, I want tiny and I want fast enough to host low-performance stuff like Home assistant, Baby buddy, an art stack, you get the jist. For this purpose a Pi that.goes into a literal drawer was exactly the thing I was looking for. It’s basically used to replace the VPS I have for security sensitive stuff (Vaultwarden). So “marginally more power” is still wasted power for me. It sits in a tiny cabinet next to my router now, happily serving me the wheel of time audiobooks and telling me when my.kid has.last eaten.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1211 months ago

                  I don’t know why there is so much Opposition to the pi

                  It’s because they’ve become way too expensive for what they are. They made perfect sense and filled a gap when they were priced half of what they are now. They’ve completely lost the direction or purpose they once had, or intentionally changed it to be something else entirely. And it seems that just doesn’t align well with many people.

                  • Norgur
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                    011 months ago

                    Thing is, the RPi 5 8gb costs 94€ after tax, so 75.in Us-before-tax-pricing. At least where I live, that’s not a bad price for the package. Bedsides, the gap they filled is still addressed by the Zero 2W which is dead cheap for it’s capabilities.

                  • Norgur
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                    -411 months ago

                    You quotemined half of my sentence and acted smug. Nice. The second (conventiently left out) part explained why I don’t get that there needs to be active opposition at all. Yet, that didn’t quite look dumb enough to drop a ride one liner, did it?

            • AggressivelyPassive
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              211 months ago

              Yeah, I have to use some weird adapter cable to get some cards to somehow maybe work a bit, but still probably need some external power supply, because there’s no way an RPi can deliver 75W.

              Yes, it’s doable, but in the sense that I could build a house with just a saw and a forest.

              • Norgur
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                011 months ago

                PCIe is mainly for SSDs, you don’t need those things with that.

        • @[email protected]
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          1011 months ago

          A refurbished thin client from eBay. Or a refubed sff/usff.
          They are pretty much the same price these days, and come with a case/PSU.
          If you don’t need the GPIO and special connectors that a raspberry pi has, sff/usff is going to be cheaper, has upgradeable ram&sata and some have pcie3.0 slot.
          Running pihole (let’s be honest, a huge reason people buy a pi)? Get a usff/sff, slap an SSD (probably the cost of a raspberry pi case/PSU/SD-card) in there and an intel i340-t4 4port NIC (this is extra. Can just use the onboard NIC), and install proxmox. Then run pihole in a VM. And now you have spare capacity to run a whole bunch of other fun things, with the safety net of snapshots and backups so if you mess up a config you can just roll another VM.

          • Norgur
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            111 months ago

            That’s about 4x the price for pihole. Pihole runsnon a zero 2w with headroom to spare. So it’s 16€+SD card+power supply you got lying around. What you described is a pretty convoluted setup for that. I had pihole+ Octoprint running on a 2W before. Worked flawlessly in my setup.

        • @[email protected]
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          611 months ago

          I was in the market for something low budget with two nics for a local firewall. Since this gave me a nice discount on top, I ordered a zimaboard now as it’s pretty much exactly what I need. Thanks for the tip

            • conciselyverbose
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              411 months ago

              If you click through to crowd supply it’s only $8, which is less ridiculous.

              But you lose the ability to have them toss a cable or two into the box at no real extra shipping cost to them, and I highly doubt their costs aren’t lower through their website.

              Wasn’t actually pulling the trigger today either way, but it’s an odd setup.

      • conciselyverbose
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        711 months ago

        That’s fine, but that means that it’s no longer anything special for a lot of the home server stuff a lot of people do with them.

        There are loads of cheap, small (not as small, but small enough for most people not to care) used x86 systems (eg thinkcentre) that I can grab instead.

      • @ashok36
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        -511 months ago

        The pi 4 is literally $35 right now. The original pi, adjusted for inflation, was $47.

    • @ashok36
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      2011 months ago

      The cheapest rpi that isn’t a zero or pico started at $35. You can buy a Pi 4 Model B 1GB for $35 on pishop.us right now.

      The pi 5 won’t ever be $35 because that’s not the price point it was designed to hit. That’s why they have a range of products, so you can buy the one that fits your budget.

        • @ashok36
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          11 months ago

          Of course the pi 4 is still part of the product range. It’s still being actively manufactured and sold. Same for the pi3.

          As far as memory size, that wasn’t part of your original complaint. You want a $35 computer, that’s how much you get. The original pi was $35 and had 256mb of ram.

          -edit also, $35 in 2012 is $47 today with inflation. The pi 4 is a crazy good deal and readily available. This complaint just has no merit.

            • @ashok36
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              611 months ago

              This is just goal moving at this point. And stating just plain incorrect facts. I’m out.

                • @ashok36
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                  -311 months ago

                  I didn’t ignore anything. You edited your reply to make it look like I did.

                  I replied at 7:31GMT. You replied to that at 7:34GMT. You edited your original post at 7:44GMT for some reason.

                  This isn’t reddit where you can’t see when or if someone edited their comment.

            • @FutileRecipe
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              611 months ago

              Its a 5-year old product. With 5 year old specs.

              It’s a Pi. Cutting edge (or even modern or high end) specs have never been it’s selling point or goal.