I spotted this project from Koichi Nakamura
A mother board approach to a Pi Zero cluster
Yes Andy stick 30++ PI Zeros which are either unobtainium or £30 ea from Cool components then stick them in an expensive carrier board then you too can have a cluster with the same compute power of an 5 year old Atom CPU 
Nice toy but Clusters of RPIs are a joke and merely noise to stop us looking at any number of much better boards out there!
Or have a 'Zero amnesty. Because maybe a whole load that were purchased are lying unused!
Mine is unused but (like many others perhaps) it is there for a "rainy day" - not really for any educational use.
(despite the amount of rainy days here.. wonder when I will finally use it.
Paul, it's always been that way, after all it's a Media Processor on a board available to the general public who are more interested in watching Hooky SKY TV servers.
We have to admit to our selves that we are a fringe as indicated by E14's own membership numbers
John Alexander wrote:
We have to admit to our selves that we are a fringe as indicated by E14's own membership numbers
Certainly true when you take single-use accounts into consideration.
It's still a pity when you look at the original aims of the Raspberry Pi (Foundation) though.
Totally agree there ..Probably most people here would too!
To me it seems even Raspberrypi.org and the resellers are not sure about the reason for the Zero. (my underlining):
Raspberry pi.org's announcement:
However their online store hints at another use, i.e. building projects!:
The resellers go a bit further. This is what ModMyPi advertise the 'Zero for. And they must be experts on it, since they are the ones facing the customers parting with the money:
For comparison, this is the old Pi model B on ModMyPi's site:
Cool Components want the 30GPB for the 'Zero and suggest this is the reason for having a Zero:
Agreed well researched Shabaz, welcome to the world of commercial RPI deployment...Really the Zero is what the "compute" board should of been at £30 is the same price £5ish is more appropriate.
I would pay a bit more for the new SOC and 1GB of RAM since the RPI only became really tractable once this happened and you can then use many more standard set ups with out cutting them down too much!
My turn again. The lament of most Pi's being used for video streaming is a reflection of the market. Build it and they will come. Pi 2 is quickly becoming the premier solution for personal video streaming. I found the biggest limiting factor is really the network bandwidth. B+ and my old B also run Kodi without buffering on clear nights, when traffic is low. Just as, my Pi 2 with overclocking, will still buffer a lot, when everybody in the neighborhood is checking their Facebook page. Be happy that the market is there, and chalk it up to a steady input of funding. Now for more interesting uses for the Pi, I didn't hear about anyone that is doing video, or artificial intelligence, or voice recognition and text to speech. The entire library of Sourceforge applications is waiting to get tested out on this platform.
Keep getting the word out. We really do have a better mouse trap.
Jack
ps. wasn't this a discussion about Pi Zero being used for clusters?
Agreed Jack the volume of sales has kept interest in this device alive although the pretence of a great educational revival on the back of it actually drives the delivery of a quite good video platform.
Fortunately with millions of them about even if the number that do inspire kids is say .01% then we will have 100s if not thousands of engineers brought in to the frey by them and we should be grateful for that.
Re Zeros for clusters, that's just silly for reasons mentioned previously also in terms of RPIs it would be more economic to use RPI2s as a cluster as you get a QUAD core for £25! and you dont need a special board to attach to them
Their generosity knows no bounds. :)
Their generosity knows no bounds. :)
Don't think there's any money in it so really no great urge to chase after the remaining stocks!
I'm not sure that this still holds for "production of the pi zero". It could be that the foundation now has a separate deal with the Sony FAB to make the 'zeros, and that those being produced are being shared between pimoroni, farnell, pihut and a few others......
Other thing is that if you can only buy one at a time then a RPI Zero is actually £10 =£5+5postage and you need to repeat that for each of them
I understand the same Roger. RPF is now actually a manufacturer in it's own right subcontracting to the likes of Sony rather than E14/Farnell/RS doing it for them!