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Hardware

Electronics Prototyping Plate Kit Board For Raspberry Pi Coming Soon 74

An anonymous reader writes "Outside of the Raspberry Pi Foundation, it seems work is being done to support the tiny PC with add-ons. One of the companies set to launch such a product is Adafruit, which has just announced an electronics plate kit for the device. The kit is currently in the prototype stages, but once released Adafruit is hoping to encourage people to use the board to prototype electronic circuits and create some embedded computer projects. It's certainly an idea that will excite those coming to the Raspberry Pi who have experience with Arduino."
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Electronics Prototyping Plate Kit Board For Raspberry Pi Coming Soon

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  • by stereoroid ( 234317 ) on Sunday April 29, 2012 @11:51AM (#39837825) Homepage Journal

    You can attach just about anything to the I2C & data busses - ADCs, DACs, controllers ... and cameras. Search for "I2C camera" for examples,

  • by DrogMan ( 708650 ) on Sunday April 29, 2012 @12:09PM (#39837917) Homepage
    They're a bit late then. There are already several kits out there - both breadboard and protoboard with solder holes in them. Get with the times!

    Try this: http://shop.ciseco.co.uk/slice-of-pi/ [ciseco.co.uk]

    Or this: http://www.skpang.co.uk/catalog/raspberry-pi-cover-with-breadboard-area-red-p-1071.html [skpang.co.uk]

    etc. I currently have the SKPang one for my Pi.

  • by itsdapead ( 734413 ) on Sunday April 29, 2012 @04:02PM (#39839153)

    I was looking yesterday if some company expanding a little on Raspberry Pi. Add LCD, serial ports, connection for WiFi boards and you are on par with many dev boards and SBCs that are sold for hundreds of $$.

    ...except that will start pushing up the price, which is the Pi's way of grabbing attention.

    Let's face it, there is nothing particularly revolutionary, hardware-wise, about the Pi. The important thing is that its so cheap that people will buy it first, and find out what it can do for them later. This is harking back to the days when the British PC market was dominated by British-designed machines like the BBC Model B - which the Pi makers invoke - and the Sinclair Spectrum/ZX81 which are actually more obviously relevant to the Pi because they were incredibly cheap. Actually, the BBC Micro was also incredibly cheap compared with the (inflated) UK price of an Apple II (the sensible comparison - the BBC ended up occupying the same niche in the UK that the Apple II did in the US), but it wasn't as affordable as the ZXs.

    A more realistic way of teaching kids to program is to use Scratch, Python or (insert language of choice) on a regular desktop or a tablet - sandboxing it as a web app or a virtual machine if you worry about kids "breaking" things. You have to provide PSU, monitor, keyboard mouse, network to use a Pi, and there are other reasons for getting regular PCs or tablets onto kid's desks. However, if the Pi can generate interest by appealing to the ZX81 spirit then what's not to like?

    The fly in the ointment is that its simply not economical to actually make the things in the UK.

  • by ThePeices ( 635180 ) on Sunday April 29, 2012 @04:40PM (#39839331)

    Hes a troll.

    The Pi board design schematic and PCB layout are all there for the world to see. Theres it nothing new, special or novel about the design itself, its all off the shelf components.

    He *may* be bitching about the broadcom SoC that has some documentation that is not available without signing an NDA ( like the GPU ), but its not a real biggie. Take the issue up with Broadcom, not RPi.

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

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