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Been looking for RPI4 CMs for ages now and they've been sold out for as long as I can remember. Same with full size RPI4s and some Odroids. Is this just the new normal or are SBCs and CMs going to show up on the market again at some point?

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[-] cynar@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

In their defence, the pi was never intended to be a powerhouse. Their focus was on getting good software support for a low cost system. This provided a stable foundation that built that turnkey reliability.

A lot of the other board providers have a habit of just creating a powerful little board, and throwing it out there to fend for itself. This is great for competent geeks, but less good for those still learning.

[-] kroy@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Meh, I don't know if they need defense. It's just kind of how it is.

They got big and popular and that means momentum. Momentum is good for adoption and momentum is good for support, but it's not great for huge jumps in technological sophistication.

I still LOVE the 2040, pico, etc, but there are just better options when you go bigger than that.

The Potato, Rock Pis.

This creator is great for when you want to SBC shop

https://www.explainingcomputers.com/sbc.html

[-] cynar@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

The raspberry pi was never meant to be a power house. It's whole goal was to make support and learning easy. A few, very well maintained models, with the same core chips. The last bit is the cause of the shortage. They can't easily redesign without fragmenting the support base. That is completely against their ethos.

I've also found, once you hit a Pi's limit, that it's best to go to something more specialist. My go-to options are NUCs for general computing, or the Nvidia Jetson series, for portable brute power. Anything that saturates a pi will quickly saturate the smaller SBCs soon after, as well. They suffer from many of the same bottlenecks.

this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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