element14 Community
element14 Community
    Register Log In
  • Site
  • Search
  • Log In Register
  • Members
    Members
    • Benefits of Membership
    • Achievement Levels
    • Members Area
    • Personal Blogs
    • Feedback and Support
    • What's New on element14
  • Learn
    Learn
    • Learning Center
    • eBooks
    • STEM Academy
    • Webinars, Training and Events
    • More
  • Technologies
    Technologies
    • 3D Printing
    • FPGA
    • Industrial Automation
    • Internet of Things
    • Power & Energy
    • Sensors
    • More
  • Challenges & Projects
    Challenges & Projects
    • Design Challenges
    • element14 presents
    • Project14
    • Arduino Projects
    • Raspberry Pi Projects
    • More
  • Products
    Products
    • Arduino
    • Dev Tools
    • Manufacturers
    • Raspberry Pi
    • RoadTests & Reviews
    • Avnet Boards Community
    • More
  • Store
    Store
    • Visit Your Store
    • Choose Another Store
      • Europe
      •  Austria (German)
      •  Belgium (Dutch, French)
      •  Bulgaria (Bulgarian)
      •  Czech Republic (Czech)
      •  Denmark (Danish)
      •  Estonia (Estonian)
      •  Finland (Finnish)
      •  France (French)
      •  Germany (German)
      •  Hungary (Hungarian)
      •  Ireland
      •  Israel
      •  Italy (Italian)
      •  Latvia (Latvian)
      •  
      •  Lithuania (Lithuanian)
      •  Netherlands (Dutch)
      •  Norway (Norwegian)
      •  Poland (Polish)
      •  Portugal (Portuguese)
      •  Romania (Romanian)
      •  Russia (Russian)
      •  Slovakia (Slovak)
      •  Slovenia (Slovenian)
      •  Spain (Spanish)
      •  Sweden (Swedish)
      •  Switzerland(German, French)
      •  Turkey (Turkish)
      •  United Kingdom
      • Asia Pacific
      •  Australia
      •  China
      •  Hong Kong
      •  India
      •  Korea (Korean)
      •  Malaysia
      •  New Zealand
      •  Philippines
      •  Singapore
      •  Taiwan
      •  Thailand (Thai)
      • Americas
      •  Brazil (Portuguese)
      •  Canada
      •  Mexico (Spanish)
      •  United States
      Can't find the country/region you're looking for? Visit our export site or find a local distributor.
  • Translate
  • Profile
Raspberry Pi
  • Products
  • More
Raspberry Pi
Documents Raspberry Pi - Year 9
  • Blog
  • Forum
  • Documents
  • Events
  • Members
  • Mentions
  • Sub-Groups
  • Tags
  • More
  • Cancel
  • New
Raspberry Pi requires membership for participation - click to join
Actions
  • Share
  • More
  • Cancel
Engagement
  • Author Author: e14phil
  • Date Created: 2 Mar 2021 11:13 AM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 16 Mar 2021 1:57 PM
  • Views 187 views
  • Likes 9 likes
  • Comments 4 comments
Related
Recommended

Raspberry Pi - Year 9

9th year of Raspberry pi

 

This year is the Raspberry Pi 's 9th Birthday so I thought it would be the perfect time to look back onto the history of the Raspberry Pi its self. Join us for our Pi Day timeline!

2006 and the Early PCBs:

The earliest versions of the Raspberry Pi Prototypes in 2005-2006 were used an Atmel ATmega644 microcontroller clocked at 22.1MHz. Here you see early Veroboard and a first PCB model.

 

To quote Eben:

These boards use an Atmel ATmega644 microcontroller clocked at 22.1MHz, and a 512K SRAM for data and framebuffer storage. 19 of the Atmel’s 32 GPIO lines are used to drive the SRAM address bus. To generate a 320×240 component video signal, the Atmel rapidly increments the address, and the data lines are fed via 74HC-series buffers to a trio of simple summing-point DACs; during horizontal and vertical blanking, it is free to perform other operations.
- Eben Upton

 

Video of 3D Rendering on this early proto board:

You don't have permission to edit metadata of this video.
Edit media
x
Upload Preview

 

2009 - The Raspberry Pi Foundation was formed

The Raspberry Pi foundation Raspberry Pi Foundation is a "UK-based charity that works to put the power of computing and digital making into the hands of people all over the world"

This group created the hardware, software, and educational outreach for what was going to be the Raspberry Pi!

 

2011 and a tiny USB Stick Prototype

In 2011 the BBC showed a tiny prototype with a onboard camera, and inline USB format.

This USB Dongle style device never made it to market but its spirit can certainly be felt in the Raspberry Pi zero.

 

2011 Alpha Boards

Raspberry Pi moved over to a Broadcom System on a chip (BCM2835) this broadcom chipset would ultimately move to be used in the Raspberry Pi Model A, B, B+, the Compute Module, and the Raspberry Pi Zero.

The alpha boards began to feature a lot of the core Raspberry Pi features you will have grown to love.

  • HDMI Out
  • Analog Video
  • USB Ports
  • SD Card

Between the end of 2011 and early 2012 Eben and Pete finalized the late beta versions of the initial raspberry Pi boards

 

2012 Classic Model A

Launching February 2012, the Raspberry Pi 1 Model B. Racking up 100,000 sales on its very first day.
In initial conversations, Eben is quoted as only wanting 1000.  Eben and Lomas were able to get the initial price to the now legendary $35. Including 2 USB 2.0 Ports. 100MBPS Ethernet and the now famouse 26 Pin GPIO Header. The launch processor was a 700MHz single-core processor and VideoCore IV GPU capable of hardware-accelerated 1080p video playback.

 

And that was it, the start of History that lead to more that 30 Million Raspberry Pi's being sold

 

 

Future and Silicon

In January 2021 we were very excited to introduce the all new Raspberry Pi Pico, a tiny, $4, MicroPython and C/C++ board with custom RP2040 silicon.

This was the first product from the Raspberry Pi Foundation built with their in house designed RP2040. At $4 and available individually or even available on reels, this Raspberry Pi is the next step in home and industrial products

Looking at the edge of the PCB you can see the Raspberry Pi Pico has been designed to be used with header pins or soldered directly onto your products PCB. This was a game changer for anyone looking to work with the Raspberry Pi in a Project or Product based PCB.

 

 

 

 

“This is the start of an exciting new era for Raspberry Pi. With Raspberry Pi Pico, and RP2040, we have been able to draw on insights drawn from a decade of using other vendors’ microcontrollers, and to create an innovative silicon platform for our customers. People have used Raspberry Pi to create a broader spread of projects and products than we could have imagined a decade ago; we’re sure the same will be true of Raspberry Pi Pico.” - James Adams, Chief Operating Officer, Raspberry Pi Trading

 

RP2040 - Raspberry Pi Silicon 

Raspberry Pi Pico is built around the brand-new Raspberry Pi RP2040 microcontroller, delivering a flexible, highly affordable development platform that can also be directly deployed into end products, reducing time-to-market. RP2040 offers high performance for integer workloads, a large on-chip memory, and a wide range of I/O options, making it a flexible solution for a wide range of microcontroller applications.
Professional design engineers who are already comfortable working with Raspberry Pi will easily adopt the Raspberry Pi Pico and appreciate its ease of use and affordability.

 

Raspberry Pi and the spirit of Collaboration

Finally in an amazing move, Raspberry Pi have reached out to other popular board manufacturers and asked if they want to be first in line to uses the RP2040 in a new Raspberry Pi Silicon powered product. These include Arduino and Adafruit Boards.

 

Adafruit Feather RP 2040
Adafruit ItsyBitsy RP 2040

 

Arduino Nano RP2040 ConnectPimoroni Pico System

 

Which collaborations do you think will be next for Raspberry Pi and the RP2040?

 

  • raspberry
  • 3.14
  • rasperry pi day 2021
  • raspberry pi
  • rp2040
  • 14th march 2021
  • pi day 2021
  • pi day
  • Share
  • History
  • More
  • Cancel
Anonymous

Top Comments

  • feiticeir0
    feiticeir0 over 1 year ago +2

    Uau !

    It's always a pleasure to learn about the beginnings of the Raspberry PI.

    The idea of taking over the world and teach computing to all was marvelous.

     

    Those early prototypes are awesome. Looking…

  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 1 year ago +1

    Really informative. I had no idea about the early ATmega prototypes!

  • e14phil
    e14phil over 1 year ago in reply to Fred27 +1

    I didn't until I researched it. its very interesting!

Parents
  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 1 year ago

    Really informative. I had no idea about the early ATmega prototypes!

    • Cancel
    • Up +1 Down
    • Reply
    • More
    • Cancel
Comment
  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 1 year ago

    Really informative. I had no idea about the early ATmega prototypes!

    • Cancel
    • Up +1 Down
    • Reply
    • More
    • Cancel
Children
  • e14phil
    e14phil over 1 year ago in reply to Fred27

    I didn't until I researched it. its very interesting!

    • Cancel
    • Up +1 Down
    • Reply
    • More
    • Cancel
Element14

element14 is the first online community specifically for engineers. Connect with your peers and get expert answers to your questions.

  • Members
  • Learn
  • Technologies
  • Challenges & Projects
  • Products
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Feedback & Support
  • FAQs
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal and Copyright Notices
  • Sitemap
  • Cookies

An Avnet Company © 2022 Premier Farnell Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Premier Farnell Ltd, registered in England and Wales (no 00876412), registered office: Farnell House, Forge Lane, Leeds LS12 2NE.

ICP 备案号 10220084.

Follow element14

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • linkedin
  • YouTube