Thursday, September 28th 2023
Raspberry Pi Foundation Launches Raspberry Pi 5
It has been over four years since the release of the Raspberry Pi 4, and in that time a lot has changed in the maker board and single-board computer landscape. For the Raspberry Pi Foundation there were struggles with worldwide demand and production capacity brought on by the global pandemic starting in 2020, and plenty of new competitors came to the scene to offer ready to order alternatives to the venerable RPi 4. Today however the production woes have been assuaged and a new generation of Raspberry Pi is here; the Raspberry Pi 5.
Raspberry Pi 5 is being announced in advance of availability unlike every prior RPi device launch. Pre-orders are open with many of the listed Approved Resellers on RPi's website starting today but unit shipments aren't expected until near the end of October 2023. As part of this pre-order scheme, RPi Foundation is withholding pre-orders from bulk customers and will be dealing in single-unit sales for individuals until at least the end of the year, as well as running some promotions with The MagPi and HackSpace magazines to give priority access to their subscribers. Genuinely nice to see, considering how hard it was to obtain a Pi 4 for the average Joe over the last couple years. The two announced prices for the RPi 5 are $60 USD for the 4 GB variant, and $80 USD for the 8 GB variant; or about $5 USD more than current reseller pricing on comparable configurations of the Raspberry Pi 4.The Raspberry Pi 5 incorporates entirely new silicon with improvements made to nearly every aspect of the board. Below, Raspberry Pi Foundation provides a list of key features that paint the broad strokes of all the changes made to the RPi 5:
Source:
Raspberry Pi
Raspberry Pi 5 is being announced in advance of availability unlike every prior RPi device launch. Pre-orders are open with many of the listed Approved Resellers on RPi's website starting today but unit shipments aren't expected until near the end of October 2023. As part of this pre-order scheme, RPi Foundation is withholding pre-orders from bulk customers and will be dealing in single-unit sales for individuals until at least the end of the year, as well as running some promotions with The MagPi and HackSpace magazines to give priority access to their subscribers. Genuinely nice to see, considering how hard it was to obtain a Pi 4 for the average Joe over the last couple years. The two announced prices for the RPi 5 are $60 USD for the 4 GB variant, and $80 USD for the 8 GB variant; or about $5 USD more than current reseller pricing on comparable configurations of the Raspberry Pi 4.The Raspberry Pi 5 incorporates entirely new silicon with improvements made to nearly every aspect of the board. Below, Raspberry Pi Foundation provides a list of key features that paint the broad strokes of all the changes made to the RPi 5:
- Broadcom BCM2712 2.4 GHz quad-core 64-bit Arm Cortex-A76 CPU (512 KB per-core L2, 2 MB shared L3)
- VideoCore VII GPU, supporting OpenGL ES 3.1, Vulkan 1.2
- Dual 4Kp60 HDMI display output
- 4Kp60 HEVC decoder
- LPDDR4X-4267 SDRAM
- Dual-band 802.11ac Wi-Fi
- Bluetooth 5.0 / Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE)
- High-speed microSD card interface with SDR104 mode support
- 2 × USB 3.0 ports, supporting simultaneous 5 Gbps operation
- 2 × USB 2.0 ports
- Gigabit Ethernet, with PoE+ support (requires separate PoE+ HAT, coming soon)
- 2 × 4-lane MIPI camera/display transceivers
- PCIe 2.0 x1 interface for fast peripherals
- Raspberry Pi standard 40-pin GPIO header
- Real-time clock (RTC)
- Power button
67 Comments on Raspberry Pi Foundation Launches Raspberry Pi 5
I'm sure it will be popular even with the higher cost of entry.
Are the A17, Snapdragon 8, Exynos, Mali, etc, better than this?
At the same time the A76 is up to 3x faster than the A72 in its predecessor
Also similar to the MTK Kompanio 820, but again only for the high performance cores.
Graphics side will be a lot worse.
Mali is an Arm GPU design which is now quite old and not use in any modern chips, but I guess the GPU will compare to something like that.
Broadcom doesn't share performance specs of the Videocore GPU.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VideoCore
I honestly do not understand some of the design choices made. Why not use USB PD for power, instead they have a proprietary 5V/5A power requirement, which is just plain insane.
Why do PCIe over a ribbon cable like this?
It's going to be really hard to attach to the carrier board due to the odd placement (by the camera input).The board shown above, is apparently not the final design, but it appears as if they were going to use the MIPI display output connector for PCIe, which would've been a smidgen better.
The fact the new chip requires active cooling to operate at full speed is just sad.
I can sort of understand the re-use of the same WiFi module, but at the same time it's quite old by now and could've been replaced by something better as literally no extra cost.
I also really loathe this form factor, it's awful for so many reasons, least not cooling now.
C'mon RPi foundation, start using pico ITX already, it's a well established industry standard.
Edit: I was wrong about the placement of the PCIe connector, but it's still a weird design choice.
The issue with the RPi 4 was due to component shortage related issues.
Now they have a custom PMIC that they can control, so they shouldn't have any major issues, unless the fab can't produce enough chips for them.
I suspect a dual-core with SMT based on Zen2 or above + 3-4CU would already be superior to the pi5's SOC in pretty much anything.
I have a really nice class D amp hat for my pi4 B hopefully will work on the 5. I use mine as a emulator station, which will be nice on the 5 with a small nvme ssd.
Phoronix has some benchmarks up. Tested against the RK3588S which has four Cortex-A76 and four Cortex-A55.
www.phoronix.com/review/raspberry-pi-5-benchmarks
Having been involved in developing a few products based around Arm chips, it's really a lot of software side work that needs to be done and all of those devices have been headless, so it doesn't even take into account how hard it is to have fully working graphics on Arm platforms. Even the proprietary drivers are rarely released fully to the public and obviously can't be part of Linux due to it being open sauce. I can understand some of the requests, but it all adds cost.
Maybe we'll see a Pi 5 lite? 5V at 5A is more like 25 W computer. See above. We're way past that now, as the RPi 5 is none of what you're describing.
After this step, I would expect running pretty much everything would be business as usual. Look up the benchmarks over at Phoronix. There can be like 30% performance difference with the cooler on. So yes, something is drawing all that juice.