Friday, April 13, 2012

Raspberry Pi computer finally reaches schoolchildren


After delays caused by a manufacturing mix-up and unanticipated safety testing, the first batch of cheap Raspberry Pi computers, designed to inspire a new generation of programmers, is finally reaching British schoolchildren.

The two firms that will sell the Raspberry Pi, which costs just £22 and was designed by a Cambridge-based charity, both said they were ready to start delivering to customers.
Today, Premier Farnell, one of the distributors, will hand some of its first shipment to local schoolchildren at its Leeds warehouse.
Meanwhile RS Components said its first batch was also ready to be dispatched from its Corby facility.
“There has been a great deal of anticipation for Raspberry Pi since its launch at the end of February,” said Glenn Jarrett, the firm’s head of electronics marketing.
It completes a rocky path for the device, which it is hoped will replicate the 1980s educational impact of the BBC Micro.
First, manufacturing contractor used the wrong internet connection component. Then, when the time came to import completed hardware to the European Union, the Raspberry Pi Foundation was surprised to learn it had to submit to safety certification. The red tape caused a further delay of almost two weeks.
The glitches have failed to dampen the excitement around the project, however. Schools and Linux enthusiasts overloaded pre-order websites when they first opened in March.
The device, roughly the size of a credit card, consists of a naked circuit board with a “system on a chip” processor that handles all the computing required to run the open source Linux operating system and software coding applications. Its power is roughly equivalent to Apple’s second generation iPhone 3G, which was released in 2008.

No comments:

Post a Comment