I used the audio connector to plug it to an amplifier in my arcade cabinet. Now, with the pi5 I have to connect it to a usb adapter. The problem is that I get parasite noise at startup and will need to buy a usb isolator. So two more devices to buy and connect for the very same result as with my pi4. Not very happy with that to say the least ...
Wow, use the RPi5 for faster performance or stick to the RPi4. If OpenCV and TensorFlow can run close to the Orange Pi5 results, then sweet deal. RPi5 GPIO examples are nice. 😎 Thanks.
Eh. Its a great board... but still not really amused by it tbh. Why? No (stock) nvme support (yeah, I know there is a nvme hat for it. Still not amused tho.), 25W max power draw (not the "real world" power draw, but still really high) and the fact that it STILL uses microhdmi ports (no, really.).
Well, I agree with you. The hardware is nothing special today, but I think that Raspberry's popularity comes from the software side of things, with the great community and the whole ecosystem built around it. I'm just glad, that something finally happened on the rpi field. Looking forward to more... Thanks for your thoughts!
Great news, thanks for this video.
You're more than welcome!
I used the audio connector to plug it to an amplifier in my arcade cabinet. Now, with the pi5 I have to connect it to a usb adapter. The problem is that I get parasite noise at startup and will need to buy a usb isolator. So two more devices to buy and connect for the very same result as with my pi4. Not very happy with that to say the least ...
Wow, use the RPi5 for faster performance or stick to the RPi4. If OpenCV and TensorFlow can run close to the Orange Pi5 results, then sweet deal. RPi5 GPIO examples are nice. 😎 Thanks.
Sure thing! :)
very good review.
Thank you very much :)
Eh. Its a great board... but still not really amused by it tbh.
Why? No (stock) nvme support (yeah, I know there is a nvme hat for it. Still not amused tho.), 25W max power draw (not the "real world" power draw, but still really high) and the fact that it STILL uses microhdmi ports (no, really.).
Well, I agree with you. The hardware is nothing special today, but I think that Raspberry's popularity comes from the software side of things, with the great community and the whole ecosystem built around it. I'm just glad, that something finally happened on the rpi field. Looking forward to more...
Thanks for your thoughts!
Imagine having to pay $20 for a headphone jack HAT
Nah :) I think if anyone would need to use mic today that they’ll use a usb one.