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TheJoe: Don't get too excited yet. The model coming out at the end of this month is a caseless model B. It's a Raspberry Pi for $35 with no case; you only get a populated PCB that you can plug in.

This release is not for consumers, it's for enthusiasts. If you're looking for a Raspberry Pi to use in the strictest sense, you have a bit longer to wait.

I'm getting the caseless B anyway because I'm shaking like a diabetic over this thing. Seriously. I've been following the Pi situation since it was first announced and I'm so goddamn anxious to get one!
Yeah i am one of enthusiasts. =)
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ZPavelZ: Looks really impressive. I have no idea how this thing could be useful to me nor do I think they will sell them here at the same price as they do, say, in US. So I will probably not be getting it in a forseeable future. However, who knows things may change.
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Miaghstir: Raspberry Pi Foundation are British, though they mark prices in USD. Not that I know how that changes anything for availability in Russia.

I'll be getting a couple as soon as I realise they've become openly available rather than as a few test boards being auctioned out.
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Deus_Ex: I wonder if in the future you could replace the CPU yourself? Would be nice to put a hummingbird there
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Miaghstir: Not in the first edition at least, it's soldered on the board (not a ZIF socket as is the norm for AMD and Intel desktop CPU's), and it's probably quite a bit too small to desolder by yourself.
...at least, that's how I've understood what I've read.
The CPU/GPU chip is also a Broadcom proprietary thing that has little in common with the Hummingbird or the Mali GPU. They have little in common except the ARM instruction set. So not even if you have the facilities to solder BGA-style chips.
Theoretically this thing will be on sale within a week. I'm not even sure what I want it for, but I definitely would like one to play with. I haven't been this excited over a release in quite some time!

EDIT: I really hope they don't sell out too fast for me to get one...
Post edited February 24, 2012 by PhoenixWright
I definitely want one, but...

The first batch (February 2012) will not have a case.
I don't want to have the naked circuitboard lying around, so I'll wait until they have cases for them.
I still have few empty pizza boxes lying around, I could use them as boxes. You know, for the flavor...
Post edited February 24, 2012 by SimonG
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Wishbone: I definitely want one, but...

The first batch (February 2012) will not have a case.
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Wishbone: I don't want to have the naked circuitboard lying around, so I'll wait until they have cases for them.
You don't want to make your own? Isn't that half the fun?!
I will definitely wait for the second batch or whatever batch that has cases for them.
XBMC is already running on it. So that's a nice simple project for me to begin with.

Gonna be really difficult to get one of the first batch though(10000). The viral marketing surrounding this thing surpasses even gog's skills in this area.
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PhoenixWright: You don't want to make your own? Isn't that half the fun?!
Yes, if I had the time and tools for it, but I have neither. I'd love to tinker with stuff like that, but I can't.
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ckvega: I wonder if RISCOS will be out for it at launch.
at launch there will be debian and fedora distros for it. Also under development is the RaspBMC distro, which is a distro optimised for XBMC.
Post edited February 24, 2012 by RealWeaponX
Getting a couple as well, mostly to use as a simple dedicated MAME board for a cabinet i been building, MAME is already available for Debian distros so this should be a cheap way of fulfilling the childhood dream of an arcade at home.

As soon as there is a cased version i'll buy one to use as a small media center/server for my movies and music.
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SimonG: I still have few empty pizza boxes lying around, I could use them as boxes. You know, for the flavor...
You could use one as a box for a couple dozen of the things.
Mmmm, low powered Wall Wart to ssh to in order to circumvent stupid ass proxies. And the best part is it doesn't cost 10-15 per month in electricity to keep running.

Or, you know, a Pirate Box, these would fit nicely into a lunch pail.
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Menelkir: Getting a couple as well, mostly to use as a simple dedicated MAME board for a cabinet i been building, MAME is already available for Debian distros so this should be a cheap way of fulfilling the childhood dream of an arcade at home.
I'm not sure how well the not-all-too-powerful ARM CPU will run MAME though.
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Menelkir: Getting a couple as well, mostly to use as a simple dedicated MAME board for a cabinet i been building, MAME is already available for Debian distros so this should be a cheap way of fulfilling the childhood dream of an arcade at home.
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Miaghstir: I'm not sure how well the not-all-too-powerful ARM CPU will run MAME though.
Been doing some checking just for the hell of it.

The website's FAQ mentions that real world performance should be comparable to a Pentium 2 300 Mhz.

I know that on an old 333 MHz Windows 98 machine with 128 MB of ram i can run CPS1/CPS2 and Neo-Geo games at full speed, using MAME32 .103.

I'm just gonna cross my fingers and hope for the best, if this doesn't work as i expect i can always stick an old Pentium 3 laptop i have in the arcade cabinet.

Next project, triple monitor 6 players cabinet!