News

The carrier board measures about 3.5″ x 3.5″ and it’s designed to work with Raspberry Pi’s Compute Model 4, which you’ll have to purchase separately (prices start at $25). Here aer some ...
But at its heart, the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 (CM4) is a computer. So maybe it’s not surprising that somebody designed a carrier board that lets use it as a desktop PC.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has just announced the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4. The new board is available starting at $25 with prices increasing to $90 depending on the customisations you make.
The Compute Module 4 is powered by a Broadcom BCM2711 quad-core Cortex-A72 (ARM v8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.5GHz supported by H.265 (HEVC) (up to 4Kp60 decode), H.264 (up to 1080p60 decode, 1080p30 encode ...
Since the introduction of the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4, power users have wanted to use NVMe drives with the diminutive ARM board. While it was always possible to get one plugged in through an ...
The latest Compute module, based on the Raspberry Pi 4, runs a 64-bit ARM Cortex-A72 CPU with built-in memory (up to 8GB) and storage (up to 32GB).
The Raspberry Pi Foundation is launching a new product today — the Compute Module 4. If you’ve been keeping an eye on the Raspberry Pi releases, you know that the flagship Raspberry Pi 4 was ...
Board designer Dominic Plunkett recently provided a deep-dive into the work that went into designing Raspberry Pi's latest Compute Module 4. Written by Owen Hughes, Senior Editor Oct. 26, 2020 at ...
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 has a built-in WiFi antenna, but that doesn’t mean it will work well for you – the physical properties of the carrier board impact your signal quality, too.
The Compute Module 4 features the same processor, but packed in a compute module for industrial use cases. A traditional Raspberry Pi is a single-board computer with a ton of ports sticking out ...