Posted on 09/18/2014 12:18:25 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Review You might think that as a purveyor of a nifty compact computer selling in the millions, youd consider two years after the debut of your first offering that it was high time you tempted back the buyers with a go-faster, more capacious and shinier model. Heck, Apple and others dont even wait that long: they upgrade products year in, year out.
Not so for the Raspberry Pi Foundation, for whom such compressed upgrade cycles are vulgarly short. The very first Raspberry Pi Model B micros slipped out early in 2012, and just over two-and-a-half years later, we have the follow-up, the Model B+ and it isnt even an upgrade in the modern sense of the word.
It is a better device, but it has been given an old-style upgrade of the kind made back when the word meant a small incremental improvement and didnt refer to an almost entirely new product that just happens to sport the same name as its predecessor.
Today, "upgrade" means chuck out your current product and buy a brand new one because its more shiny. Because the Pi Model B+ is still only 30 quid, an upgrade *de nos jours* isnt a big deal, but dont assume that youll be getting a completely new piece of hardware.
The B+ is simply a redesigned version of the original the Foundation calls it an evolution of the original Pi, and dubs it "Revision 3" of the B rather than an updated version.
So what has changed? From a compute perspective, not a jot. The B+ runs no more quickly and has no extra memory than the B has. Pi eaters looking for a device with more for them to get their teeth into will be disappointed.
Spot the differences: The B and the B+ (left and right)
Instead, the Foundation has taken the opportunity to give the B a makeover in order to address some of the board layout issues and component gripes that users had about the original. Its as if the B were the beta and the B+ the golden master.
Spring-loaded Micro SD slot? Don't mind if we do
Gone, then, is the flaky, latch-less SD card reader, replaced by a Micro SD slot that is spring-loaded to prevent the inadvertent card removals that fritzed so many Model A and Model B users installed operating systems.
I had already converted to Micro SD for my Pi storage, using a three-quarter size SD adaptor, so I was able to take the storage out of my B and pop it straight into the B+ and have it boot without any bother. Thats a sign that, from the perspective of the software, nothing has changed.
Indeed, thats the point: changing some of the major components would have inevitably required users to start from scratch with a fresh install. Of course, folk who havent already migrated to Micro SD will have to anyway. Or not, since the benefits of the B+ are limited.
The B+ sports FOUR USB ports
The Model A Pis single USB port was next to useless; the B had two, which was useful but still not enough to connect a mouse, keyboard and Something Else unless you had a USB hub. The B+ has four USB ports, more than my laptop, though my laptop has Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, keyboard and mouse built in. None of these are integrated into the Pi, making USB ports a much-treasured resource. The ports arent quite flush with the edge of the board, but they dont poke out as far as they did on the B and they align with each other and the Ethernet port.
The B+ sports improved power regulation circuitry: out goes the old wasteful linear regulator, in comes an much more efficient switching regulator. That helps drive the extra USB ports, but there are still limits. I have an old 2.5-inch laptop hard drive in a bus-powered caddy, but the B+ couldnt provide it with sufficient power and I use a 5V, 2A USB AC adaptor. Even removing the keyboard, wireless mouse dongle and a USB stick didnt help, ditto shifting to a 5V, 2.4A adaptor, so there may well be some instances where youll need extra juice.
So if youre thinking about replacing your Model A or B, make sure you dont sell your USB hub too.
That said, smaller external hard drives ran without a problem. So much depends on precisely what you want to hook up to the Pi: drives, webcams, wireless network adaptors, whatever. For me, the important thing is having enough ports for day-to-day usage ie, keyboard, mouse and occasional USB stick so I pack away the hub. If you do use a hub, the Foundation has eliminated back-powering, an issue that bothered some A and B users.
Gone are the separate RCA composite-video and 3.5mm audio ports, both replaced by a single 3.5mm port that handles both sound and vision. Better circuitry a dedicated power supply, essentially means theres less noise to interfere with the audio signal. It has been relocated to the other side of the board next to the HDMI jack, which now supports bus-powered VGA adaptors, says the Foundation. The boards display and camera connectors are still present.
Bringing the AV ports together would have made sense even if the Foundation hadnt chosen to expand the B+s GPIO pinout, but it has done just that, increasing the count from 26 pins to 40.
fyi
It’s great reading a fairly long story, complete with pictures, and still not knowing when I got done what in the heck the thing is for. :-)
— signed, Not A Tech Geek
I’ve seen this sort of stuff advertised in MCM electronics. I have absolutely no idea what it is, other than some sort of computing device.
I’ve seen these tiny computers at electronics websites but I still don’t know what you do with them.
I’m sure it does something. Probably something to do with computers.
No sweat. The Raspberry Pi is a computer. It is the size of a deck of playing cards (ok, maybe a pinochle deck)when put into a separately sold case.
It is to tech geeks what the krate engine is to gear heads, a side of beef to chefs, a gift card to home depot for he improvements guy, kitchen pass to the mid-life crisis guy, etc.
It can be whatever the lucky possessor wants it to be. Seen guys make TIVO/entertainment servers, small footprint desktop computing (Really small), plugged and programmed into some of the early recreational drones to run specific routes while shooting video and doing stunts.
If one remembers when one could build heathkit radios, or rebuild just about anything electronic with a manual and a trip to radio shack, this little (and CHEAP....under 50.00) device is that kind of hobbyist’s dream.
Cheers!
I bought on to play around with a while back. But found the arduino board more to my liking since I didn’t need the power of the Pi.
For non geeks the easiest way to explain it is to imagine a table computer without a screen, battery, or any buttons. It is a super small form factor Linux based computer.
A really great project is to set up a Pi with a Pi video camera and put the lot into one of those dummy CCTV camera housings. Now you have a video monitoring and capture system for under $150.
Just think of it as a tiny, low powered Linux server with a bajillion hobby uses. I’ve used mine as a home theater server, Voice Over IP telephone server, etc. The CPU is about as powerful as one you’d find in a 4 year old smart phone if that gives you any idea. The graphics processor is powerful enough to play high definition movies, though.
Cool. Now I can use that powered USB hub I bought for something else...
Any links on how to build a HT MS?
Triumph of substance over form
BFL
I LOVE my Pi devices! The wife and I have two of them with RaspBMC installed on them (A Pi variant of the popular XBMC media center), and they play everything from home movies, to Pandora, NetFlix, Hulu, YouTube... everything. It’s orders of magnitude cheaper than building an HTPC, but it works just as well.
This isn't true. The switching power supply does not drive the USB ports. That is the same 5V supply that runs the board, just filtered on-board a little bit.
Love me some Raspberry Pi.
Seen that. Haven’t run it yet...
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