I dunno when it happened but I swear SBCs were the new best thing in the universe for a while and everyone was building cool little servers with their RockPis and OrangePis.

Now it’s all gone x86 and Proxmox with everyone shitting on Arm. What happened? What gives?

Is my small army of xPis pointless? What about my 2 Edge routers?

I’ve got about 6 xPis scattered round my flat - is there anything worth doing with them or should I just bin them?

All thoughts, feelings and information welcome. Thank you.

  • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    Very much this. The allure of raspberry pis was that they were $30 toys that could actually be used to do things that were equivalent to much more expensive computers and computer control systems.

    Somewhere along the way they lost the plot, probably when supply chain issues drove their prices sky high along with the compute modules being used for home lab servers, and now cheap knockoffs based off of Rockville chips or ESP32 are just as capable as raspberry pis for a fraction of the cost, and at the same time actual desktop computers in miniature form factor have become so cheap on the second hand market that they are incredibly competitive with the raspberry pi.

    Don’t get me wrong, pi is a great platform. But the use cases in which it leads the pack have become incredibly narrow.

    Actually I can’t think of anything that raspberry pi does that can’t be done better by a less expensive alternative.

    Even the pi5 with the nvme hat is not currently price competitive with a 4-year-old HP ultra small form factor as far as I know.

    • Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, make a Pi with 1GB RAM, video & ethernet for like 20-30€ and you’d ruin me.

      I know about the banana, orange, whetever-pis but in my experience they always needed lots of extra stuff to work (like fucing and recompiling libraries). The Pi “just worked” IMO.

    • aard@kyu.de
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      9 months ago

      Actually I can’t think of anything that raspberry pi does that can’t be done better by a less expensive alternative.

      That has been true even before the price increase - what still makes me use pis now and then is that just so many people are familiar with them, the standardized form factor with lots of extension modules, and the software support - pretty much any software targeting that kind of use has been tested on pi variants.

      I’d nowadays go for using compute modules, though - they’re smaller, and you can get them with flash, eliminating the SD card problem many pis had. You can get carrier boards for the compute modules in the classic pi form factor, so you can have the best of both worlds.

      • Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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        9 months ago

        What’s the benefits of compute modules, except the sd card? Doesn’t it have to have hardware support to work?

        • aard@kyu.de
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          9 months ago

          A small form factor, small high density connector. Most interfaces are not populated, as on the regular pis, but just lead out via the connector, so you can decide what you want to expose on your compute module carrier. It has a gbit ethernet chip on board, and a pcie chip - rpi4 also has pcie, but it is hooked up to USB3 there. With the compute module you can decide what you want to do with that.

      • Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Rockchip based boards are gaining traction. Whlie still not as easy as Pi’s, the community is starting to jump after they got ditched for corporations during Covid. Orange Pi is offering good value these days but it can still require tinkering if your use case hasn’t already been done by someone before.

    • const_void@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      price competitive with a 4-year-old HP ultra small form factor

      What’s the model number for that?