Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 28th Aug 2011 21:19 UTC
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Member since:
2006-01-06
And this isn't for 3rd world nations. First and foremost this is for the benefit of the education system in the UK. What other extra benefits this may have are just gravy.
Of course in the UK I would think that getting a desktop x86 based computer would be fairly easy. The market there is probably saturated with plenty of people trying to find any way they can to get rid of their old equipment.
The real impact IMHO of the rpi will be for hobbyists. Cheaper than the arduino, more connectivity options (via available pins) and dramatically more horsepower.
I personally would like a microusb power connector so I power it from my computer with a $1 cable. Also microusb cell phone chargers have enough power to run the rpi (1W running quake3!) and should be available most anywhere in the world now, including some developing nations that have gone with cell phones in lieu of running traditional analog phone lines.
Edited 2011-08-29 21:07 UTC