Sujet : Re: rPI Goes Public
De : Pancho.Jones (at) *nospam* proton.me (Pancho)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.miscDate : 12. Jun 2024, 08:31:38
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v4bisq$1hptf$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 12/06/2024 03:00, 26xh.0717 wrote:
https://www.euronews.com/business/2024/06/11/raspberry-pi-shares-rise-by-more-than-a-third-on-london-market-debut
British microcomputer maker Raspberry Pi launched its initial
public offering (IPO) today on the London Stock Exchange (LSE)
after pricing its shares at 280p.
For now, only conditional trading is allowed, which means that
only some select investors will be able to trade the company’s
shares, with the majority of retail investors having to wait
until Friday 14 June, when trading opens for everyone.
Following the IPO however, Raspberry Pi’s shares soared as
high as 392p, with the company revealing that it was hoping
for a valuation of about £541.6 million (€642.48 million).
The Cambridge based group said on its website: “This is a
watershed moment for Raspberry Pi, and the start of a new
phase in our evolution: access to the public market will
enable us to build more of the products you love, faster.
Mighty white of them, while they pocket half a billion quid.
. . .
Well, we hope for the best.
However "faster", unto itself, was never what PIs were
supposed to be all about. They are a kind of halfway
point between micro-controllers and "real PCs" - a
neglected niche they filled quite well along with
a few others like BBBs.
But what are we looking at now, "Pi Desktops" ?
"Gamers PIs" ? Sorry, but THOSE niches are packed
with strong competition, no money to be made.
The rPi5 is a desktop. Arm desktops is a nascent market.
I'd SAY the P5 is maybe as far as they should go in
terms of "performance" now (except that Debian went
to hell with Worm).
I've not benchmarked, but I think The rPi5 is under-performant compared to things built on the RK3588 soc. There are clear benefits to something slightly more powerful.
Continued dominance of both MS Windows and Intel x86 is looking less certain than it has for decades. The Raspberry Pi is in a good place.
More I/O options/interfaces
might be a more productive direction. SuperMicro
sells some little 5x5 inch boards that have plugs
on them for stuff I'd never even heard of in about
50 years into computers - had to look up some of
them. Each had, and apparently still have, real-world
uses. THIS, IMHO, is where PI should be. Kiosk/
industrial/robotic/whatever-odd-use.
There are tons of micro-controllers - Ards are good
and have huge libraries now - and "real PCs" of
the x86 ilk are just prolific (look up BMax and
BeeLink if you want 'small'/affordable), but there
is still room in the middle and PI is a known name.
BeeLink etc are good, but I suspect they only exist because Intel are responding to Arm.
Oh ... one RISK of going public, aggressive
competitors can buy-out, and exterminate.
Hard to exterminate Arm. The Raspberry Pi Foundation is a bit like Tesla, anyone can build a Pi like device, but Raspberry Pi have experience of doing a good job.