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52 votes
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The Hirox microscope has rotary head attachments that allows you to sweep around your tiny subject like a drone
7 votes -
Helsinki now among the top five cities in Europe for defence, security and resilience investments – Nordic nation has 368 defence tech companies; 40% are startups and scale-ups
13 votes -
cohost.org to shut down by the end of 2024
36 votes -
💾 Floppy8 - A tiny computer, in a floppy drive
22 votes -
Raspberry Pi Foundation announces details of impending release of the Raspberry Pi 5
52 votes -
Microsoft Cloud hiring to "implement global small modular reactor and microreactor" strategy to power data centers
18 votes -
Micro datacenters begin trials as commercial heating units
19 votes -
Request: Alternatives to the Raspberry Pi?
I will shortly have need for a small, low power (power as in watts, not compute power) system for always-on Home Assistant use. However, Raspberry Pis are out of stock everywhere and while they...
I will shortly have need for a small, low power (power as in watts, not compute power) system for always-on Home Assistant use. However, Raspberry Pis are out of stock everywhere and while they can be had for extortionate prices on various auction/marketplace sites, I'm not sure I want to spend a load of money on something which might not even be what it claims to be.
Home Assistant suggest Odroid which I'd probably go for the C4 edition but it's relatively expensive (I need to add an MMC and a psu and various other things to the listed main board price)
Any suggestions? The Asus Tinkerboard looks overkill and is very expensive. It needs to be capable of running a standard Linux distro, ideally Home Assistant's own OS. Low power consumption is a definite, 2-3W at idle is probably the maximum I'd be happy with. Wifi is a bonus although not required right now - but the ability to add it if needed is essential. Some amount of expansion capability would be good if I want to add hardware sensors or bluetooth or a Zigbee transceiver or whatever. It needs some reasonably amount of compute grunt I assume but I don't think HA is all that hungry for number crunching power. The machine will more than likely be headless at first but a little bit of GPU and graphical IO would be handy if I want to stick a display on it in the future, which I might want to.
Any ideas? Oh, and also must be easily available in/to the UK.
15 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 / 4GB giveaway
Step right up and claim your raspberry pi! I have the following to give away (will cross off as things get claimed, first come first served): Raspberry Pi 4 / 4 GB + PoE hat + microSD card...
Step right up and claim your raspberry pi!
I have the following to give away (will cross off as things get claimed, first come first served):
Raspberry Pi 4 / 4 GB + PoE hat + microSD cardRaspberry Pi 4 / 4 GB + PoE hat + microSD cardRaspberry Pi 4 / 4 GB + PoE hat + microSD cardRaspberry Pi 4 / 4 GB + PoE hat + microSD cardRaspberry Pi x4 "rack" acrylic enclosure- 5 port gigabit network switch + 4x 6 inch patch cables
Just pay for shipping. Please only claim one thing (or one Pi and the enclosure).
17 votes -
scholar.social: Academic and research-focused microblogging platform
11 votes -
Official Raspberry Pi 4 Desktop Kit - Is it worth the price?
6 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 CRT-based VR Headset
15 votes -
Microbrowsers are everywhere
10 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 on sale now from $35 | USB3, Gigabit Ethernet, 1.5GHz Quad Core, Upto 4GB RAM
54 votes