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Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid> wrote:On a sunny day (Sun, 17 Nov 2024 01:34:45 -0000 (UTC)) it happened>
antispam@fricas.org (Waldek Hebisch) wrote in
<vhbh7j$26abk$1@paganini.bofh.team>:
Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid> wrote:>
What bothers me today (thought maybe use an extra Raspberry Pi) is that prices
are going up to insane lavels for a Raspi5 8 Gb + supply + housing + sdcard to above 120 USD:
https://www.sossolutions.nl/raspberry-pi-5-8gb-starter-kit-compleet
For just a bit more you have a decent mini computer:
https://www.aliexpress.com/w/wholesale-mini-pc-x86.html
Inflation?
Time to end raspi stuff and look for other solutions.
I bought Raspberry Pi 1B when they appeared, but after that used
Chinese alternatives.
Same here, have some old Pi2 versions...
one Pi2 is on 24/7 running a server, measuring air pressure, radiation,
this Pi4 8 GB I use for web browsing and Usenet
a Pi4 4 GB records security cams and plays audio, records airplane traffic (with dump1090)
and lots more stuff...
Orange Pi used to be cheap, most is more
expensive now. But Orange Pi Zero 3 is reasonably priced and
powerful enough for my purpose. You apparently want PC class machine,
for this I want real PC.
I have several 'real' PCs.. but those are big and use a lot of power, have DVD burner, huge harddisks,
Almost never on these days, stopped burning optical disks, almost all USB harddisks for data storage now.
I mostly depend on storing data on multiple HDD-s (my PC have mirrored
pair of discs and I have extra discs for backup). In last several years
I did not burn any DVD-s, but maybe I will do some with importand data
for extra safety (DVD are too small for bulk data).
I depend on data stored on HDD, most is fetched from Internert but
things vanish randomly from the net and I have my own indices of
interesting data, so I normally use local copy from my disk. Also,
have some compute intensive stuff.
>>For light use mini-PCs may be enough and>are quite cheap. I got one for equvalent of $70, 6GB RAM, dual core
Celeron N3350, 64 GB solid state disc, 2 USB 3.0 slots (+ 2 USB 2.0),
LAN, Wifi, of course in case and with included power supply. For
me important advantage is that there is no fan (passive cooling only).
Less powerful used mini-PCs can be as cheap as equivalent of $5.
Sound good, x86 based is nice too, have written lotd of stuff for that
Supposedly some "TV boxes" are cheap, resonably powerful and can
be programmed with Linux. But I did not try one.
Indeed, I have several satellite reception boxes, HD recording and playback no problem with those
some have internet connection too, record to USB SD stick.
When full with stuff I like to keep I copy it to a 4 TB Toshiba USB harddisk connected to my Pi4 8 GB.
I do have a satellite reception PCI card in an old x86 PC too, but that is not HD.
But wrote a lot of software for it.
Pi-s are better for electronics/automation thanks to available
interfaces, but that needs much less compute power (camera is the
only high bandwidth interface that I use).
Yes, GPIO is nice, on the PCs I uses the parport for I/O,
even specifically bought a parport PCI card for that on ebay..
Much goes via ethernet these days and that works fine on Rspberry too.
Building / designing things with ethernet interface is not that hard.
severl projects on my site:
https://panteltje.nl/panteltje/newsflex/download.html
USB is also fast enough for many things.
USB can do milliseconds, ethernet hundreds of microseconds, small
micros can do much better. Theoretically with a micro connected via USB
one can synchronize clocks of the micro and PC with microsecond
accuracy, I plan to try this but do not know how this will work.
>>When you are satified
with lower compute power there are some cheap ones. I am trying
now Milkv Duo. Radxa ROCK also seem to be reasonably priced.
But once you want faster CPU, more RAM, EMMC, etc they are getting
more expensive. I am not sure why, memory modules for PC seem
to be cheaper than price of adding memory to SBC-s (possibly this
is just pure marketing).
Yes, a lot of marketing is involved
You get sort of addicted to GPIO with Raspberries...
Anyways how much processing power do I really need?
I program a lot of stuff in asm for Microchip PICs:
https://panteltje.nl/panteltje/pic/index.html
Nice. I have avoided PICs, using now mostly STM32 and coding in C.
One can create quite small and efficient programs in C. I use
assembler when I feel it is better but currently that is mainly
for delay loop. Doing all in efficient assembler would be large
effort for moderate gain (maybe 20% efficiency/size improvement),
and IME "easy assembler" tend to be less efficient than C.
This world creates bloat sftware so it can sell new hardware, Microsoft has shares in hardware companies,>
so new bloat needs new hardware.. more money
I dislike bloat but OTOH thanks to bloat powerful PC-s are available
at affordable price. Otherwise they would be an expensive industry/
corporate items.
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