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The new Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3 provides processing power for a wide array of industrial, home automation and internet of things devices.
Raspberry Pi's new Compute Module 3 has serious competition coming its way from the maker of the $15 Pine64 board computer.
It improves upon its immediate Compute Module 3 predecessor with the quad-core Broadcom BCM2837BO ARM SoC that can also be found on the Raspberry Pi 3B+, however, it sees its maximum clock reduced ...
The first Compute Module was released in 2014, and now the Raspberry Pi Foundation has launched a new version that’s based on the Raspberry Pi 3.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has launched the Compute Module 3 for $30 and the Compute Module 3 Lite for $25. However, most users will probably not buy the modules, and here's why.
Now that the Pi Compute Module 3 and 3+ have been out for a while, it’s only fitting that these modules get a great carrier board. The balenaFin 1.1 is out now, and it’s the perfect carrier ...
The new Compute Module is based on the BCM2837 processor – the same as found in the Raspberry Pi 3 – running at 1.2 GHz with 1 gigabyte of RAM.
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.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has launched the Compute Module 3, a slimmed-down Raspberry Pi missing the SD card and other sockets for embedding in other products.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation's Compute Module is the perfect solution for applications that don't need full connectivity.
With a sample provided by Raspberry Pi, Home Assistant Yellow now supports the Compute Module 5 (CM5), which will be integrated into Home Assistant OS 14 alongside additional hardware support.
Raspberry Pi's new Compute Module 3 has serious competition coming its way from the maker of the $15 Pine64 board computer.