The Register on MSN
The sweetest slice of Pi: Raspberry Pi 500+ sports mechanical keys, 16GB, and built-in SSD
Big performance on offer, but be prepared to spend $200 HANDS ON Raspberry Pi has unveiled a fully loaded version of its computer-in-a-keyboard, featuring oodles of RAM, an SSD, and a clicky, ...
The computer is currently available to purchase from the usual suspects like CanaKit and Micro Center, and generally starts ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 Plus is available now with a $110 price bump over last year’s model.
The Raspberry Pi 500+ is an upgrade to the Raspberry Pi 500 keyboard PC, getting a mechanical keyboard with RGB LED lighting, ...
How fitting that Raspberry Pi Foundation chose a throwback Thursday to unveil its Raspberry Pi 500+, an all-in-one PC that ...
Those premium features include a mechanical keyboard with user-replaceable keycaps and RGB backlit keys. And while it has the same quad-core ARM Cortex-A76 processor as the Raspberry Pi 500, the new ...
Less than a year after it shipped its Pi 500 “computer in a keyboard,” Raspberry Pi is back with a more polished and premium ...
Like the original Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+, the new Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ (Compact) is a small board that connects to a Raspberry Pi 5’s FPC connector to give you an M.2 slot with support for SSDs or ...
As founder Eben Upton explains, it all starts with a high-quality mechanical keyboard with removable keycaps and individual addressable RGB LEDs. Light users are invited to ...
The Raspberry Pi 500+ is arriving for $200, and offers more RAM and storage than the regular 500 model. It also adopts mechanical key switches instead of membrane keys.
For something non-explosive, this might be the most American project we’ve featured in a while. [Makerinator]’s domestic bliss was apparently threatened by the question “what shall we have for dinner” ...
Hosted on MSN
Swapping SD cards on Raspberry Pi is frustrating, so I use this Ventoy-like tool for multi-boot
Raspberry Pi and other SBCs can boot an operating system from SD cards and USB devices. I own multiple SD cards and am a fan of swapping them to instantly switch to a different OS, such as RetroPie, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results