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AI Hardware

The Raspberry Pi 5 Gets an AI Upgrade 47

Today, Raspberry Pi introduced a new kit that adds AI functionality to the Raspberry Pi 5. ZDNet reports: The Raspberry Pi AI kit combines an M.2-format Hailo 8L AI accelerator with the Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ to create a powerful yet power-efficient solution. The Hailo-8L NPU (Neural Processing Unit) chip, capable of 13 trillion operations per second (TOPS), is built into an M.2 2242 form factor module that attaches to the M.2 HAT+. When connected to a Raspberry Pi 5 board running the latest Raspberry Pi OS, the NPU is automatically available for AI computing tasks. The AI module also has direct access to the Raspberry Pi's camera software stack and works with both first-party and third-party cameras.

The NPU allows the Raspberry Pi 5 to perform AI tasks such as object and facial recognition, human pose analysis, and more. Using an NPU frees up the Raspberry Pi 5's CPU, allowing it to focus on other tasks, making your projects more efficient and powerful. The Raspberry Pi AI kit is also compatible with the Raspberry Pi Active Cooler, ensuring optimal performance without overheating. Additionally, you can purchase a clear protective layer to prevent damage to the board, giving you peace of mind while working on your projects.
The AI kit is priced at $70. It's available from Raspberry Pi Approved Resellers, including PiHut, PiShop.us, and CanaKit.
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The Raspberry Pi 5 Gets an AI Upgrade

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  • Sellouts (Score:4, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2024 @07:39PM (#64523577)

    They are supposed to be reducing the cost of computing instead they're increasing it. The Raspberry Pi (without this AI kit) has been increased from $35 to $70, with nothing material to justify the price increase. If they had bumped it up to $70 and included a power supply, memory card, mouse, and 15 inch display .. then yeah .. I would say they justified it. They increased it to $70 with an unnecessary speed increase. They've sold out on their mission. It's 2024, we should be able to have a usable sub-$100 dollar desktop (with display, mouse/keyboard, monitor, case, etc) by now.

    • Re:Sellouts (Score:5, Informative)

      by chris234 ( 59958 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2024 @07:46PM (#64523589)

      The Pi 4 is still $35, so if you don't need the speed or new features there isn't any change.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      "They increased it to $70 with an unnecessary speed increase." Is that how we view technology now? It's good enough and it doesn't need to go any faster? Aside from the fact that previous Raspberry PIs didn't have a PCIe bus, so the new one isn't just faster, it allows you to include an nmve drive or (as this story talks about) an AI accelerator. If you really like the older models you can still buy them for the same price you know.

      When the Raspberry Pi 3 came out the McDonalds cheeseburger cost $1.28 or so

      • The thing is, technology has always ventured to try to reduce the cost, increase accessibility, and reduce the barrier of entry. That was the culture we had since the 1950s. I hope we're not witnessing a reverse trend. It means we've handed the reigns over to finance idiots instead of technologists and engineers. That's why burger and housing prices increased, btw. They've rigged the housing markets to ensure it's difficult to build new units thereby securing demand by choking off supply. I'm not pissed bec

        • There's more to making computing accessible than the cost. With a standard form factor and platform people can develop for it and share information online and it all just works without too much additional effort to find device drivers and cope with the nuances of different hardware.
        • Re:lolwut (Score:5, Informative)

          by CaptQuark ( 2706165 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2024 @12:37AM (#64523967)

          I am grumpy because raspberry pi gave up on trying to make computing more accessible.

          You can purchase a Raspberry Pi with multiple features and speeds from $4 to $80. You want to learn programming, hardware interfaces, wireless networking, etc, then purchase the $6 Raspberry Pi Pico W. Just because the Raspberry Pi 5 8GB is $80 doesn't mean it's the only, or even best, choice to begin with.

          https://www.pishop.us/product-... [pishop.us]

          Your argument is like complaining nobody can learn to become an automobile mechanic because a Lamborghini Huracan starts at over $250K.

          • The Picos are a microcontroller and aren't directly comparable to the mainstream Pis

            • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

              Sure, and it's just fine for learning the things the GP specified. It's almost as if that's why they specifically mentioned those things before the recommendation.

    • Re:Sellouts (Score:4, Funny)

      by chrism238 ( 657741 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2024 @10:06PM (#64523805)
      Sorry to hear that you were forced to buy something you didn't want.
    • Re:Sellouts (Score:5, Insightful)

      by stikves ( 127823 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2024 @10:34PM (#64523831) Homepage

      If you are just looking for a hobby kit which is still pretty capable, there is RPi4 with 2GB RAM available in many places.

      For example:
      https://www.digikey.com/en/pro... [digikey.com]

      Listed at $45 at the time of checking and "In-Stock: 2,783"

      If that is still expensive, there is the "Raspberry Pi 3 Model B" at $35, and the "Nano" ones at even more affordable prices.

      What happened was people started using these as full fledged desktop replacements. The latest ones has up to 8GB of RAM, PCIe/nvme support, much more powerful CPUs and GPUs and ability to run latest Linux distributions.

      Of course that is going to be expensive.

    • You can have a sub 100$ desktop all day long it may not be new but it will probably run circles around a pi5

      • That's used. How can schools with low budget, especially in developing countries, purchase those at scale?

        • by hjf ( 703092 )

          schools with low budget, especially in developing countries, aren't buying Pi at scale.

          also "developing country" is a stupid term nowadays. China is still considered a "developing country".

        • at the school where I used to teach, we had a 3 year refresh cycle, so at the refresh, I called up schools in Africa and told them I would send them these computers if only they could pay the shipping. They unanimously told me that they couldn't afford that. I offered to I split the cost with them, still too expensive.

          So, instead, some rural school district in Georgia got a bunch of them and were glad to get them, the teacher was going to pay the shipping out of her own pocket to get them because the sc

        • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

          moving goalpost, the original stament

          It's 2024, we should be able to have a usable sub-$100 dollar desktop (with display, mouse/keyboard, monitor, case, etc) by now.

          you can all you want, then you changed the requirements

          That's used. How can schools with low budget, especially in developing countries, purchase those at scale?

          I dont fuckin know, go online and get a pallet of used computers? https://www.govdeals.com/asset... [govdeals.com]
          How were they going to afford rasberry pi's with all the accessories in the first place? its not like they have ever been plentiful in their entire existence

    • The Raspberry Pi (without this AI kit) has been increased from $35 to $70, with nothing material to justify the price increase.

      The $70 model has more RAM than the previous Windows laptop I was issued for work. Saying there's nothing material to justify the price increase is just plain stupid. You don't *have* to buy fancy fast stuff. The previous models are still manufactured for a reason.

    • Not only that but they got rid of the composite video output. If you are retro gaming on an actual CRT, the Pi5 is not for you.
      And yes I do have a 36in 480i Trinitron . It's mostly there to fill the cabinet spot. Would look weird without it.
      I did play with Retropie and Recalbox. Could never get past over scan issues in the Pi video drivers. Only 60% of the image was visible.

      That said, Central computers near me has a Pi5 for $59.99 .

    • by kriston ( 7886 )

      That's why many of us have moved to the Orange Pi line [orangepi.org] for non-AI applications.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      The Pi 5 is a lot faster. It's a pretty "material" justification. If you don't think so, get a Pi 4, 3, or 1, all of which are still being produced and fully supported. Or get a Zero 2 which is $15.

  • Wow! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Megahurts ( 215296 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2024 @10:50PM (#64523847)

    Just imagine a Beowulf cluster of those!

  • The processing power doesn't seem like much more than what a Pi5 itself can do. Is the interconnect that much faster than Ethernet? Do you even need a high bandwidth interconnect for most applications?
    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      The processing power doesn't seem like much more than what a Pi5 itself can do. Is the interconnect that much faster than Ethernet?

      A bit, yes. It's only a single lane of PCIe, but that's still 5 gigabits per second bidirectionally (full duplex).

      • Well, the version of Ethernet I use at home is 10GBASE-T. However my Pi4 can't hope to reach that speed. I tried Realtek 2.5GBASE-T NICs and they were just too unstable to withstand even a 1hr iperf3 test.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          Well, the version of Ethernet I use at home is 10GBASE-T. However my Pi4 can't hope to reach that speed. I tried Realtek 2.5GBASE-T NICs and they were just too unstable to withstand even a 1hr iperf3 test.

          Unstable in what way? In theory, it should be able to sustain roughly 2.5 gigabit most of the time, assuming you aren't using the other USB ports (because a single PCIe lane's bandwidth is shared across all the USB ports).

          I'm assuming, of course, that you're using a switch that supports flow control. Otherwise, yeah, you could run into problems if one end is pushing 2.5 gigabit and the other end can't keep up for any reason (whether because of bandwidth sharing, thermal throttling on the CPU, or too much

  • by evil_aaronm ( 671521 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2024 @12:51AM (#64523973)
    I have the Pi5, but it runs really hot - like burn your finger to touch it hot. It hasn't burned out, yet, but I don't use it constantly, either.

    I kinda like this one: https://www.mouser.com/new/bea... [mouser.com] . In addition to the Linux base, it also has six Cortex-R5F MCUs at up to 1GHz, and two C66x floating-point DSP, if you want to combine some Linux and real-time. By the time you buy a Pi5 and this hat, you're almost to the AI-64, anyway.
  • This one isn’t for llm but more vision and audio
  • by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2024 @07:36AM (#64524415) Journal
    Jeff Geerling on YouTube already has a video up [youtube.com] showing setup and usage in object detection.
  • I'm curious to know how this stacks up against the Coral Edge TPU.
    https://coral.ai/products/ [coral.ai]

    I've got the USB version of the Coral ($60) but there are also a couple of M.2 versions that sell for $25. There are a number of ready-made models for it that recognize dozens of objects and you can create your own models or modify existing ones. The API lets you just submit images from the camera (or a file) and you get a list of recognition results back in about 8ms. That's more than fast enough to keep up with th

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