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    No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    pi 4raspberrynews
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    • sirhenrythe5thS
      sirhenrythe5th @hazeldig
      last edited by

      I am 45, so in my case it matches 😂

      @topic: i am also a bit dissapointed that there will be no Pi4 this year, but i can unterstand that.

      I am at the point that i cannot improve my image for the Pi3B+ any more.
      So i will use the time till the release of the Pi4 by switching back to a PC, in fact a Intel NUC Mini-PC with enough power for any system i would like to emulate including PS2, GameCube and Saturn.
      I will use Launchbox as Frontend, so i will be busy and dont have to be too bored till 2020.

      -- Retro-Achievements Username: SirALX --
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      UDb23U 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • UDb23U
        UDb23 @sirhenrythe5th
        last edited by

        @sirhenrythe5th said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

        Intel NUC Mini-PC

        They look cool and have powerful specs; still way too expensive for just retrogaming. If you use it also as a standard pc it could make sense.
        I got my old i7 with a quite nice graphics card that I use mainly for photography related sw and sometimes for "serious" PC gaming (read: Company of Heroes II).

        Still having a small (and silent) device to connect to a 55' TV and play the classics is a totally different story :-)).
        And yes, all that tinkering with settings/configs and artwork is big part of the fun.
        While waiting for the new Pi plenty of artwork is still to be created to make my "perfect" personal Retropie.

        quicksilverQ sirhenrythe5thS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • quicksilverQ
          quicksilver @UDb23
          last edited by

          @UDb23 said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

          While waiting for the new Pi plenty of artwork is still to be created to make my "perfect" personal Retropie.

          You sharing that artwork is at least one thing I can look forward to then :)

          UDb23U 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • sirhenrythe5thS
            sirhenrythe5th @UDb23
            last edited by

            @UDb23 to be honest i really want to use the NUC only for retrogaming 😊
            I dont use Office or similar programs at home since i work with it every day in my job.
            Emulation is my main hobby since 20 years now and so i have no problem with paying more than for a Pi (talking about the NUC i7 Enthusiast btw. It's about 750€ here in germany which is even less expensive than my Athlon FX-55 i bought in 2003. And that was only a CPU 😊)

            Of course my beloved Raspberry Pi will be used further on!!! I love my setup with the CRT, something that will not be possible so easily with a NUC

            -- Retro-Achievements Username: SirALX --
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            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • UDb23U
              UDb23 @quicksilver
              last edited by

              @quicksilver said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

              You sharing that artwork is at least one thing I can look forward to then :)

              And here you go ;-)

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • herb_fargusH
                herb_fargus administrators
                last edited by

                I guess it gives them a year to improve software support

                If you read the documentation it will answer 99% of your questions: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/

                Also if you want a solution to your problems read this first: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ClydeC
                  Clyde @thelostsoul
                  last edited by

                  @thelostsoul said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                  For me its ok not having a new generation of Raspi this year. :-)

                  Same here. My Pi 3b (without +) runs all the systems that I need in my upright arcade cabinet, and I have too many games to play anyway. For anything else I have my Linux PCs (1 Tower PC that I seldom use nowadays, 1 Mini PC, and 1 Laptop).

                  That said, anyone who was hoping for a Pi 4 this year has my sincerest sympathy.

                  AshpoolA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • B
                    Brunnis
                    last edited by

                    Kind of weird responses from Upton... I was not expecting the Pi 4 this year, but some of his answers made me raise my eyebrows, especially these:

                    "I think we kind of understand what featureset we want [and] what would be involved in getting that featureset. I don’t think we have a defined plan for turning that into a product yet."

                    Upton told us that he and his team haven't yet decided on a process node.

                    So he wants us to believe that since the Pi 3 was released in 2016, they might have gained somewhat of an understanding of the features they want but they don't even have a plan for how to turn it into a product. Considering the challenges they face, i.e. the need for a completely new SoC, I'd say that means the Pi is at least two years away from launch. The chance of them going from "there's no defined plan" to having designed/manufactured/tested a new SoC, implemented it on a new board and written launch ready software/drivers for it in one year are slim, to say the least. I'm a programmer and embedded systems designer myself, so I have at least some experience to draw from.

                    All of the above is if Upton is completely honest in his answers. There's at least some chance he's just trolling us all.

                    herb_fargusH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • herb_fargusH
                      herb_fargus administrators @Brunnis
                      last edited by

                      @Brunnis said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                      There's at least some chance he's just trolling us all.

                      One can hope

                      If you read the documentation it will answer 99% of your questions: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/

                      Also if you want a solution to your problems read this first: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • dankcushionsD
                        dankcushions Global Moderator
                        last edited by

                        with eric anholt (the guy who wrote the open source driver for the pi's VC4 gpu) about a year deep into writing the open source driver for the broadcom VC5 gpu (see https://anholt.github.io/twivc4/) i think it's a fairly good bet that the RPI4 will have VC5 (gles 3.1, vulkan, etc), which i assume dictates the kind of cpu/chipset/memory configs it can have, etc.

                        there's also been engineers on the RPI forum saying they know what it's going to be (i can't find the link), so i think upton is being a little bit evasive for whatever reason. i'm pretty sure they know the design at this point.

                        mituM B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • mituM
                          mitu Global Moderator @dankcushions
                          last edited by

                          @dankcushions I seem to remember also something like this - maybe it was this topic ?

                          dankcushionsD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • dankcushionsD
                            dankcushions Global Moderator @mitu
                            last edited by

                            @mitu said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                            @dankcushions I seem to remember also something like this - maybe it was this topic ?

                            yes, that's it - thanks! specifically: https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1409794#p1409794

                            Everything we have done so far has evolved the original design. I know the specs of the Pi4. It's not an evolution, it's a revolution and a HUGE step up.

                            B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • B
                              Brunnis @dankcushions
                              last edited by

                              @dankcushions Ahh, yes, I remember seeing this. I forgot to mention it in my first post, but that’s one of the reasons I said Upton may be trolling us. It’s interesting that it’s mentioned to be a revolution. I have always expected that, but many people still seem to believe that the Pi 4 will just be a slightly higher clocked A53 based design, maybe with more cores. I’d say that there’s a very high probability of them going with another symmetrical four core design, with conservatively clocked high-performance cores. I definitely expect them to try to lower the power consumption as well.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • ClydeC
                                Clyde @BuZz
                                last edited by Clyde

                                @BuZz said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                                He got a 2 day ban for making it personal. As said - read the whole thread.

                                Just a friendly reminder: That was 4 days ago and he still appears to be banned. :)

                                BuZzB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • BuZzB
                                  BuZz administrators @Clyde
                                  last edited by

                                  @Clyde not sure. It says the ban is temporary. Maybe he has to log in to disable it and he hasnt. I can manually remove but I suspect that's the case.

                                  To help us help you - please make sure you read the sticky topics before posting - https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                                  ClydeC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • ClydeC
                                    Clyde @BuZz
                                    last edited by

                                    @BuZz A okay, just noticed it by accident. :)

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • RiverstormR
                                      Riverstorm
                                      last edited by

                                      That went from 0 to 60 faster than a Rimac C_Two. It's sure easy to do. Maybe it was just a bad day.

                                      It seems store bought emulation is a far more enticing prospect than building from scratch from the popularity of all the "mini" consoles being sold by the millions.

                                      Some interesting numbers from the foundation as of December 2018 and the emulation scene didn't even get a honorable mention. I think it would be interesting to see actual numbers but from poking around it sure looks like emulation is a smaller percentage in the big Pi picture as an educational board.

                                      A lot happened in 2018, the Raspberry Pi folks has some interesting stats, marketshare / units and more.

                                      • 23 million + Raspberry Pi computers sold.

                                      • 250,000+ young people engaging with our clubs, competitions, and programmes every week.

                                      • Tens of thousands of young people learning digital skills through our partnerships with the Scouts, the National Citizen Service, and the European Space Agency.

                                      • 30,000 + volunteers mobilised.

                                      • 50,000+ teachers and volunteers have taken part in our online courses.

                                      • Over 1 million projects completed on our new projects site.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                                      • cyperghostC
                                        cyperghost
                                        last edited by cyperghost

                                        @Riverstorm That are interesting numbers and yes the Pie is a huge educational platform.

                                        Haha ;) Maybe @BuZz can show other stats.
                                        How many users registered each year (from 2016-2018)
                                        How many posts were done during the years and so on ... I think the whole forum will not outstand the educational factor the foundation gives.

                                        @cyperghost

                                        The Pie is a great multi-purpose mashine!

                                        Yes it is

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • AshpoolA
                                          Ashpool @Clyde
                                          last edited by Ashpool

                                          @Clyde said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                                          @thelostsoul said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                                          For me its ok not having a new generation of Raspi this year. :-)

                                          Same here. My Pi 3b (without +) runs all the systems that I need in my upright arcade cabinet, and I have too many games to play anyway. For anything else I have my Linux PCs (1 Tower PC that I seldom use nowadays, 1 Mini PC, and 1 Laptop).

                                          Right - For Retropie my 3B+ is all I need/wanted for now...
                                          I had hoped for a new Raspi with native HEVC and (extra wish) with 10bit decoding for h264/h265 (no, i am not asking about 12bit), but well - that can wait (as HD HEVC decoding in Software with the latest OSMC/KODI installs is as smooth as it can get (no dropouts/lags/etc))

                                          And as said, the Raspi is a Tinker Board... Playing around with a Breadboard and some sensors/actuators/whatsoever is addictive as retrogaming and more so if you have kids -> gaming can be fun (for kids: building your own ones in scratch or similiar visual programming languages is even more fun), but building your own devices that are controlled via the raspi is so... sooo much more an experience (and yes education) - and comparing both communities from outside their respective filter bubble, I am not sure which one has more "followers", but my bet would be on side of the non-emulation tinkers (with a huge overlap of people belonging to both sides education/edutainment/tinker and retrogaming/tinker EDIT: ok, media-center only people could be considered as another group (I know at least 2 People who only bought their Raspi to be used as a MediaCenter (KODI) and nothing else))...

                                          ClydeC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ClydeC
                                            Clyde @Ashpool
                                            last edited by

                                            @Ashpool said in No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.:

                                            comparing both communities from outside their respective filter bubble, I am not sure which one has more "followers", but my bet would be on side of the non-emulation tinkers

                                            Mine would be, too. Just looking at all the projects that are featured on https://www.raspberrypi.org, I'm astonished every time what people can and will do when they're given such an open little allrounder. Even many scientists use it for their research!

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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