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Hardware Hacking Open Source Technology Build

Build the 2006 Prototype $25 PC 120

An anonymous reader writes "As the launch of the $25 PC gets ever closer (sometime next month), members of the Raspberry Pi team have found time to start blogging about the history of the project. Eben Upton, director of the Raspberry Pi Foundation, has been working on the project for many years, and decided to share a couple of very early prototypes for the $25 PC with the community. The 2006 edition of the PC used an Atmel ATmega644 microcontroller. It ran at 22.1MHz with 512K of SRAM. Compare that to the final version of the PC, which will use a 700MHz ARM11 processor and 128MB/256MB of SDRAM. Five years clearly brings a massive leap in performance. For those of us happy to play around with components at this level, Eben has made the schematics and PCB layout available to download (ZIP file). Armed with this information you can create your very own 2006 Raspberry Pi machine."
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Build the 2006 Prototype $25 PC

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  • Re:Useless (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Monday October 24, 2011 @03:30PM (#37822328)

    Of course it isn't useless.

    Students can learn about the components that make up a computer and learn the basics of computers all for $25.

    That's way cooler than anything we did in IT when I was in high-school.

    At the end of it- you get a takehome computer capable of playing Quake 3.

    That's how you get the kids interested in this.

    I've never used Linux. For $25 I may buy a kit for my son for Xmas. He can learn about computers- and then I can steal it from him and teach myself linux.

  • Vaporware (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Animats ( 122034 ) on Monday October 24, 2011 @04:22PM (#37823260) Homepage

    They've been talking about this since 2006. They've built prototypes. They have a web site, logos, a wiki, and a fan club.

    What they don't have is shipping product.

    They really need to shut up and ship. They we get to see if their price point is real.

    GuruPlug, the $99 Linux wall wart, is real and available. Gumstix has been offering machines around $100 for years.

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