News

Board designer Dominic Plunkett recently provided a deep-dive into the work that went into designing Raspberry Pi's latest Compute Module 4.
The idea is that anyone can develop a product for the Raspberry Pi, create a custom board with a SODIMM connector, and use the compute module as the brains of their project.
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4S is a SODIMM-style version of the Compute Module 4. It has the same processor as the standard model, but the form factor restricts the I/O capabilities, so it’s ...
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 (CM5) is a versatile system-on-a-module designed for industrial and individual developer applications, supporting projects like IoT devices and AI systems.
3. Preparing the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 Next, disable the 'process of booting the OS from eMMC flash memory' so that you can write the OS to the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5.
The latest version is called the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3+ and it’s available for purchase for $25 and up starting today.
The Compute Module 4 features the same processor, but packed in a compute module for industrial use cases. A traditional Raspberry Pi is a single-board computer with a ton of ports sticking out.
The Compute Module 5 offers a similar experience with all the power of the foundation's latest flagship computer, but Raspberry Pi no longer builds Compute Modules on a SODIMM foundation.
Pi Compute Module 5 TL;DR Key Takeaways : The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 was unveiled at the Electronica Fair 2024, featuring significant hardware upgrades and connectivity enhancements.
The use of the Compute Module in displays made for public signage is oddly a continuation of an unseen tradition for ARM-based machines from Cambridge.