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    No Raspberry Pi 4 in 2019.

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    pi 4raspberrynews
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    • 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
                        • Drakaen391D
                          Drakaen391
                          last edited by

                          You also cant compare Odroid to the Pi as they are for two separate markets.

                          The Pi has multiple options and its used in thousands of different applications.

                          Obviously here, people are about the gaming, but that is a very small part of the pi.

                          Another huge difference is the fact the pi uses its memory quite well when compared to the Odroid. People speak a lot about specs, but those who have programmed or worked on games knows that specs don't mean a damn if the programming cant talk to the system correctly.

                          In speed tests, the Odroid in its native Ubuntu runs some apps slower then Pi on its native OS.

                          RPi B & RPi 3B OC (Now Raspberry pi 4b 8gb)
                          Retropie (Latest Stable)
                          PiBox with Wind Tunnel Cooling System

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • S
                            Shaddonai @UDb23
                            last edited by

                            @UDb23 this made me sad :(

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • goobatroopaG
                              goobatroopa
                              last edited by

                              https://coral.withgoogle.com/products/dev-board/

                              Is this Google's RPi4?

                              Edge TPU Module (SOM)
                              NXP i.MX 8M SOC (Quad-core Cortex-A53, plus Cortex-M4F)
                              Google Edge TPU ML accelerator coprocessor
                              Cryptographic coprocessor
                              Wi-Fi 2x2 MIMO (802.11b/g/n/ac 2.4/5GHz)
                              Bluetooth 4.1
                              8GB eMMC
                              1GB LPDDR4
                              USB connections
                              USB Type-C power port (5V DC)
                              USB 3.0 Type-C OTG port
                              USB 3.0 Type-A host port
                              USB 2.0 Micro-B serial console port
                              Audio connections
                              3.5mm audio jack (CTIA compliant)
                              Digital PDM microphone (x2)
                              2.54mm 4-pin terminal for stereo speakers
                              Video connections
                              HDMI 2.0a (full size)
                              39-pin FFC connector for MIPI-DSI display (4-lane)
                              24-pin FFC connector for MIPI-CSI2 camera (4-lane)
                              MicroSD card slot
                              Gigabit Ethernet port
                              40-pin GPIO expansion header
                              Supports Mendel Linux (derivative of Debian)

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

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

                                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.

                                I found an old thread on the RPi forums from November where jamesh ("Principal Software Engineer at Raspberry Pi (Trading) Ltd.") writes a number of interesting comments regarding the Pi 4:

                                Regarding whether the Pi 4 will be evolutionary or revolutionary:
                                https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=226958#p1392095

                                Revolutionary. The Pi4 looks pretty good to me! 5 and 6 also have impressive specs, although subject to change this far ahead, and there's a lot of work required for them.

                                Meanwhile, enjoy the current range, it's a while yet before the Pi4 comes out.

                                https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=226958#p1392129

                                We also have a roadmap for the next 5 years. Which could change, but not the Pi4, that's pretty much set in stone.

                                https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=226958&sid=2fc66c519bbe9cf4d4927bbc922d8597&start=50#p1392404

                                I doubt anything wil change on the Pi4, too far along in development, so the sword wil remain firmly installed in the stone.

                                As response to a comment quoting Upton as saying the following back in 2017: "It's a long road to get to Pi 4," Upton said, "but we'll get there eventually."
                                https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=226958&start=75#p1399467

                                Eventually. Lots of work to do...

                                I'd say this paints a slightly different picture compared to the Upton quotes from Toms Hardware. I didn't really get the impression from Upton that the Pi 4 is pretty much set in stone. To be honest though, I would be quite surprised if it wasn't set in stone at this point in time.

                                It's pretty clear that we're unlikely to see the Pi 4 for yet a while, though. I'm guessing for Pi Day in a year's time (but obviously still hoping to be shocked by an announcement this coming Thursday :D).

                                B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • B
                                  Brunnis @Brunnis
                                  last edited by

                                  jamesh on the Raspberry Pi forums March 26 2019:

                                  Pi4 feature set IS set in stone. Of course, I'm not going to say what that feature set is, but it's pretty cool.

                                  mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • mituM
                                    mitu Global Moderator @Brunnis
                                    last edited by

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

                                    but it's pretty cool.

                                    Heatsink confirmed.

                                    B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • B
                                      Brunnis @mitu
                                      last edited by Brunnis

                                      @mitu Or they’ve gone for a 12/14/16 nm class manufacturing process, enabling them to drastically lower power consumption while still providing a rough doubling of performance.

                                      One can dream.

                                      EDIT: To expand slightly on that. People widely believe 28 nm will be used for the Pi 4. I'm not so sure about that. 28 nm is rather old now and has been used for cheap SBCs for years. 40nm was just ~3 years old when the first Pi launched. 28 nm is now ~7 years old already and will probably be at least 8 years old when the Pi 4 launches. Now that the RPi Foundation takes the rather large step to design a completely new SoC for the Pi 4, I'd guess that they'd try to be as forward looking as they can afford, in order to be able to build a couple of future SoC variants on the same process. They can pretty much guarantee some rather large chip volumes to the foundry as well.

                                      Also, they'll probably want to lower the power consumption on the Pi 4 compared to the Pi 3 B+ or even Pi 3. Power consumption has ballooned because they've been stuck on 40 nm and because they've wanted to squeeze every bit of performance out of the SoC. That has lead to power consumption figures that I'm guessing they're not all that happy with. Besides pushing the USB Micro-B capabilities for power delivery, it is incredibly easy to make the SoC throttle without additional cooling (two integer heavy threads will do the trick within minutes). Even with 28 nm it may be hard to combine both a decent power consumption reduction and a large performance increase.

                                      28 nm is probably a lot cheaper than the more recent processes, though, so it's entirely possible that it is the only feasible process in order to meet the ~$35 target.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • quicksilverQ
                                        quicksilver
                                        last edited by

                                        Someone on the raspberry pi forums asked Jamesh what "cool" meant to him. His response is below :D

                                        "Cool is not an attitude - It's a state of mind. Imagine an eagle flying through the Rocky Mountains, suddenly, it spies its prey, and falls, falls, falls, it's wings guiding it, but to what?

                                        Think of the primitive thoughts cascading through the eagles mind as it plummets towards the rocks below. That is the Pi4."

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

                                          What if we have a little guessing game on what the Raspberry Pi 4 will be and then we can see when it launches who was closest?

                                          It's easy to come up with ideas for improvements, but it's much harder to determine what's realistic given the obvious cost constraints. Also, the Raspberry Pi Foundation has stated multiple times that they will only consider a feature if it is of high importance to a very large part of its user base.

                                          Here's my optimistic but hopefully not entirely unrealistic guess:

                                          SoC:

                                          • 12/14/16 nm class SoC
                                          • Cortex-A73 (4 cores, ~1.6 GHz) -> 100-150 % performance improvement compared to Pi 3 B+
                                          • VideoCore V -> More than 100 % performance improvement compared to Pi 3 B+

                                          RAM:

                                          • 2GB LPDDR3

                                          Interfaces:

                                          • HDMI 2.X (4K, 60 Hz)
                                          • 2xUSB3
                                          • 2xUSB2
                                          • Each USB port is a host port (i.e. no integrated hub)
                                          • Gigabit Ethernet (capable of 900 Mbps+) on its own interface (i.e. not attached to USB)
                                          • SD card: UHS-I 208 MHz (up to 104 MB/s)
                                          • Micro-USB power

                                          Price:

                                          • 35 USD

                                          Form factor:

                                          • Same physical size. Similar or identical connector placement. Might even be compatible with most old cases.

                                          Power consumption:

                                          • Approximately 500 mW per core. Similar to Pi 3B and ~30 % lower than Pi 3 B+.
                                          thelostsoulT B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • thelostsoulT
                                            thelostsoul @Brunnis
                                            last edited by thelostsoul

                                            @Brunnis
                                            Here is my prediction I made in January. At least we agree on RAM, GPU, USB and HDMI. I forgot the Gigabit Ethernet. About "Each USB port is a host port (i.e. no integrated hub)", why in the first place did they use an integrated hub? For cost saving, does it make any much difference for "most" users or is it just a very specific case? The cpu of my choice is much more powerful and probably isn't realistic, but I also took a price tag of $ 50 in perspective. The Raspberry Pi foundation already said they will stay at $ 35 price point, so this is very unlikely. I wish there would be a powerful pro version of the regular Pi and I am sure that I am not the only person.

                                            Warning: The below link to Cortex-A75 Wikipedia article is pointing to wrong A73. Here the right link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARM_Cortex-A75

                                            @thelostsoul said in Raspberry Pi4 Speculation:

                                            I wouldn't mind if the starting price would be higher than the previous entries. The previous cpu was "Broadcom BCM2837B0 VideoCore IV" and "Cortex-A53 (ARMv8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.4GHz". Wikipedia page about VideoCore: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VideoCore

                                            Spec:

                                            • CPU: Cortex-A75 (ARMv8-A) 64-bit SoC @ 2.8GHz
                                            • SOC: BCM7251
                                            • GPU: VideoCore V (500Mhz? compared to 400Mhz on Pi3)
                                            • 16GB fast internal space
                                            • DDR3 2GB RAM (compared to DDR2 1GB)

                                            Connections:

                                            • 4K/60Hz HDMI output (or dual 1080p/60Hz output)
                                            • 2 x USB 2.0 Type A (our current for legacy)
                                            • 2 x USB 3.2 Type C (the smaller new type)
                                            • 1 x SATA revision 3.0 (6 Gbit/s) (probably not)
                                            • onboard power and reset switch (probably not)
                                            • dedicated RCA Composite Video output (probably not)

                                            50 $/€ initial price tag (instead 35 of the previous). Ok, this is more like a wishlist. I even don't know if these
                                            cpu and gpu and soc would work together and if this is realistic in that price point. But hey, I expect groundbreaking changes without compatible with older version.

                                            📜 RE/SET: 100 SNES Games for your RetroPie, 🎁 Share your hidden gems and insider tips

                                            B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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