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New Multi-Core Raspberry Pi 2 Launches 355

First time accepted submitter MicroHex writes Coming in at the same $35 price-point that has come to be expected from the Raspberry Pi, it looks like the new Model 2 will be packing a quad-core ARM processor with a GB of RAM. From the article: "The Raspberry Pi Foundation is likely to provoke a global geekgasm today with the surprise release of the Raspberry Pi 2 Model B: a turbocharged version of the B+ boasting a new Broadcom BCM2836 900MHz quad-core system-on-chip with 1GB of RAM – all of which will drive performance "at least 6x" that of the B+."
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New Multi-Core Raspberry Pi 2 Launches

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  • Editing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MicroHex ( 3009059 ) on Monday February 02, 2015 @12:16AM (#48955663)
    Man, you guys sure do edit harshly =p I don't see a word I wrote in there.
    • Re:Editing (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 02, 2015 @12:34AM (#48955787)

      The editors run all submissions through three rounds of Google translate (Ukrainian to Korean to Swahili) then translate the output back to English. Dice Holdings considers this editorial technique their second greatest achievement. Blashdot Seta is their crowning achievement.

    • Or I could just be tired and caffeine deprived. I can see some text that is mine in there. I'd delete my comment is I could. =p
      • Congratulations still for the first submission and interesting article! Keep 'em coming. Fresh blood is always a nice thing in the submission pool.
    • by tloh ( 451585 )

      After nothing coming of my own submissions over the years, I've been curious about what exactly is done here. Finally some clue from another....

  • If this fixes the disk io issues I'm buying 5. On a B+, copying data to a HDD slaved to it is painfully slow. Like 10Mb slow.
    • I bought a Banana Pi as a download/torrent box. Only slightly more expensive (especially if you include shipping) but with a SATA port that gives me about 60MB/s. And it runs Raspbian.

  • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Monday February 02, 2015 @12:48AM (#48955855)

    Good grief is the naming scheme tiresome.

    Did anyone think about problems this goofy naming scheme causes? The ease of searching supplier's catalogs, googling, etc? Hell, just talking to another person? "Oh yeah, I've got the Pi 2 Model B plus", versus "I've got a Model D." Did anyone concern themselves with the fact that a lot of resellers may not ID the revision at all? How are you supposed to google for an issue you're having with the latest model?

    • by sillivalley ( 411349 ) <{sillivalley} {at} {comcast.net}> on Monday February 02, 2015 @01:12AM (#48956001)
      Yes, it's underpowered and possibly overpriced in comparison to (x, y, z,...)

      But the Raspberry Pi has a large and growing ecosystem behind it -- developers (hardware and software), users, and more.

      The Arduino is a similar beast -- underpowered, overpriced, and with a tremendous ecosystem, approachable and available to new classes of users.

      As an example, look at what Adafruit is doing with Arduinos and the Raspberry Pi -- making them available, accessible, and useable by a wide audience, not just those tho are comfortable rebuilding kernels.

      Look at other historical examples -- the underpowered 6502 (Apple ][) or that atrocity with 640k is good enough for anybody, right?
      • *Bingo*. Also, I have a group of friends that complain that it's *over* powered, too large and takes too much power. Every bugger wants everything to be exactly tailored to their own imagined specs.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • But can it handle HEVC?
  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Monday February 02, 2015 @01:09AM (#48955987) Journal

    I'm laughing at those Windows 8 users posting here complaining that a friggin GIG of RAM isn't enough. Most rPI projects are also done on Arduinos and similar, with a 20Mhz clock and RAM measured in bytes. Typical Pi programs are hundreds of bytes. 1024 bytes is 1024 small variables; how many do you need to turn lamps on and off, or position a servo?

    Running your 200 byte program on top of a Linux kernel is just a convenience. It's not made to run Microsoft Office on it all day, it's designed for reading a few switches, turning on a motor, and lighting an led - which requires about 24 bytes of RAM.

    Of course some people use them as entertainment media centers. That's kind of the one oddball use that needs a thousand times the resources of most things people use their Pi for.

    • Windows 8 grabs only 600 MB RAM on startup. Launch a couple of Office programs and you would still be easily under 1024 MB.

      Of course this a bit past your point. You're correct that writing embedded software is quite a different task than doing GUI stuff with all the bells and whistles. :)

  • Power usage? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Monday February 02, 2015 @01:11AM (#48955995) Journal

    Quad cores are mighty hungry and I doubt it will come with those fancy lithium ION expensive batteries on our smart phones.

    This is important as these are for embedded devices

    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      They still manufacture the A+, which I was playing around with this very afternoon, it is still single core, and even with a Edimax usb wifi nub (I hesitate to call it a dongle, it's too short) plugged in, it only pulls about 130mA, but "spikes" to 160mA when you start pinging Google or 250mA if you start X. By comparison the B+ single core starts at around 250mA draw due to the extra USB host controller and can well exceed 600mA running Minecraft with a mouse and keyboard plugged in and the GPU at full til

      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        I've got an overclocked Model B (the overclock options are right in rpi-config!) that will pull nearly an Amp when running Quake 3. It's a good test on which companies make good power adapters and which ones don't. (Apple's work, Samsung's do not).
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • R-Pi 2.x should be 64-bit. This is a learning platform, and the future is 64-bit arm .... NOW.

    • Right because the demand for more than 4 gigs of ram and tons of virtual address support for those Oracle databases these suckers are going to be processing.

  • It's about time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kriston ( 7886 ) on Monday February 02, 2015 @02:10AM (#48956207) Homepage Journal

    The Raspberry Pi series is an awesome hobbyist device at an impossibly low price point.

    I'm glad they are finally offering more memory and multi-core processors. That way I don't need to get a BananaPi or other copycat. This way, I can continue to support the vitally important Raspberry Pi foundation and their goals.

    Thanks for finally offering more memory and multi-core. Next time let's also choose a truly open framebuffer, or let's pressure Broadcom to open their VideoCore architecture once and for all.

    • The Raspberry Pi series is an awesome hobbyist device

      From my perspective, this announcement puts the Raspberry Pi squarely in the Big Leagues. I've played around with Asterisk and also NeoRouter VPN Server using my original Pi, and this is perfect hardware for these critical tasks. Another one is as an Intrusion Detection System (IDS). The Asterisk/FreePBX can appreciate the extra horsepower this new development affords and should run fine. Not much more than a month ago, this CuBox-i4PRO won a nice end-of-

  • They really should have called it the Rho.

  • I used a few building some hobbyist level stuff and I found it easy to use, tons of software and documentation available in proper english and if you want to build network/internet enabled stuff it's way cheaper than using arduino, pic based stuff or any other thing I found available.

    Latest example: I built a nixie clock with ntp sync. Is the pi wildly overpowered? Of course, but the A+ + 8gb microsd card ran me ~22eur plus the cost of a 8gb microsd and a wi-fi adapter (I had those and don't remember the or

    • It's a typical /. response of critisise first, never do. And yes, the main selling point of the Pi is the community and support around it, not the actual board itself.

  • I'm already imaginig a Beowulf cluster of these.

  • I'm I the only one that has noticed that:

    1. The official site has nothing about it
    2. Broadcom has nothing on their site about a BCM2836
    3. On the register photo, there is no RAM on the PI (it should be on top of the processor)

    and many many more little things

  • Windows10 support (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 02, 2015 @05:37AM (#48956777)

    Did anyone notice this: http://dev.windows.com/en-us/featured/raspberrypi2support
    Apperantly at zero cost... Might get interesting...

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