With the recent sale of Commodore to a group of enthusiasts – and the subsequent Commodore 64 Ultimate launch – the PC-in-a-Keyboard has returned to the fore of some enthusiasts’ thoughts. It’s the ideal form factor really – allowing you to have a completely clear desk, a thin screen, and as few wires as possible. Alas, the performance of such machines has understandably lagged behind since we moved on from Zilog Z80s and their ilk.
Everyone’s favourite (citation needed) Ultra-SFF SBC manufacturer, Raspberry Pi, seems to have been working on a successor to their Raspberry Pi 400 (launched in 2020 with 4 GB of RAM and an… ugh… membrane keyboard) and 500 (launched last year) models and have now launched the Raspberry Pi 500+, at a reported launch price of US$200. Including the keyboard (obviously), processor, 256 GB M.2 SSD and memory (again obviously, being that the Raspberry Pi ecosystem revolves around embedded systems), and taking to account the ongoing price inflation with each...
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