This is not an howto or a project per se, but it will definitly be reference in upcoming howto’s and projects.
What I present here is a summary of the Raspberry Pi specs and features:
Model A
- 256MB RAM
- one USB port
- no Ethernet
- Power: 500 mA model
Model B
- 512MB RAM
- 2 USB ports
- Ethernet port
- Power: 700-1000mA
Model A&B
- Main Specs
- 700 Mhz (Most devices will run happily at 800MHz)
- 8 dedicated GPIO pins
- UART (Rs232)
- i2c bus
- SPI bus with two chip selects (also in arduino)
- i2s audio
- Power - 3v3, 5v, and ground.
- If you dont use UART, i2c, etc (and use all for GPIO)
- Revision 1 - 17 GPIOs
- Revision 2 - 21 GPIOs.
- GPIOs can theoretically be expanded indefinitely by I2C or SPI bus.
- Physical - Measures 85.60mm x 56mm x 21mm
- It weighs 45g.
- Network
- 100 Mbps (model B only)
- Ethernet is attached via the USB 2.0 bus (Gigabit not possible)
- No netbooting or pxe
- Power
- Tension: 4,75 Volts - 5,24 Volts (You can test it on the TP2 and TP1 contacts)
- Maximum Power - 1 Amp (1000 mA)
- GPIO pins can draw 50mA safely (all)
- Individual GPIO pin can only safely draw 16mA
- Camera module requires 250mA
- Keyboards and mice can take as little as 100mA or over 1000mA!!! (be aware, and chose low power keyboards an mice)
- Video
- Raspberry Pi can record and play h.264 (mp4/mkv)
- Two additional codecs can be purchased (RBPi Store):
- MPEG-2 - DVDs Codec
- VC-1 - BlueRay Codec (Microsoft format - Blu-ray discs, Windows Media, Slingbox, and HD-DVDs)
- No real time clock (RTC)
- Camera Board (Omnivision 5647)
- Is the only camera module that is compatible
- Connects via the CSI-2 camera port using short ribbon cable
- The ribbon cable can be up to 4 meters
- Connects to the Image System Pipeline (ISP)
- Camera module (Omnivision 5647) specs are:
- Photo - 5MP (2592×1944 pixels)
- Video - 1080p 30Fps 1920x1080x30fps)
- Power - 250mA
Based On: http://www.raspberrypi.org/faqs#introShares
What I present here is a summary of the Raspberry Pi specs and features:
Model A
- 256MB RAM
- one USB port
- no Ethernet
- Power: 500 mA model
Model B
- 512MB RAM
- 2 USB ports
- Ethernet port
- Power: 700-1000mA
Model A&B
- Main Specs
- 700 Mhz (Most devices will run happily at 800MHz)
- 8 dedicated GPIO pins
- UART (Rs232)
- i2c bus
- SPI bus with two chip selects (also in arduino)
- i2s audio
- Power - 3v3, 5v, and ground.
- If you dont use UART, i2c, etc (and use all for GPIO)
- Revision 1 - 17 GPIOs
- Revision 2 - 21 GPIOs.
- GPIOs can theoretically be expanded indefinitely by I2C or SPI bus.
- Physical - Measures 85.60mm x 56mm x 21mm
- It weighs 45g.
- Network
- 100 Mbps (model B only)
- Ethernet is attached via the USB 2.0 bus (Gigabit not possible)
- No netbooting or pxe
- Power
- Tension: 4,75 Volts - 5,24 Volts (You can test it on the TP2 and TP1 contacts)
- Maximum Power - 1 Amp (1000 mA)
- GPIO pins can draw 50mA safely (all)
- Individual GPIO pin can only safely draw 16mA
- Camera module requires 250mA
- Keyboards and mice can take as little as 100mA or over 1000mA!!! (be aware, and chose low power keyboards an mice)
- Video
- Raspberry Pi can record and play h.264 (mp4/mkv)
- Two additional codecs can be purchased (RBPi Store):
- MPEG-2 - DVDs Codec
- VC-1 - BlueRay Codec (Microsoft format - Blu-ray discs, Windows Media, Slingbox, and HD-DVDs)
- No real time clock (RTC)
- Camera Board (Omnivision 5647)
- Is the only camera module that is compatible
- Connects via the CSI-2 camera port using short ribbon cable
- The ribbon cable can be up to 4 meters
- Connects to the Image System Pipeline (ISP)
- Camera module (Omnivision 5647) specs are:
- Photo - 5MP (2592×1944 pixels)
- Video - 1080p 30Fps 1920x1080x30fps)
- Power - 250mA
Based On: http://www.raspberrypi.org/faqs#introShares
1 comment:
thanks for sharing information,good blog..
Passive Networking
Structured Cabling
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