- published: 19 Aug 2016
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The Raspberry Pi is a series of credit card–sized single-board computers developed in England, United Kingdom by the Raspberry Pi Foundation with the intention of promoting the teaching of basic computer science in schools and developing countries. The original Raspberry Pi and Raspberry Pi 2 are manufactured in several board configurations through licensed manufacturing agreements with Newark element14 (Premier Farnell), RS Components and Egoman. The hardware is the same across all manufacturers.
All Raspberry Pis include the same VideoCore IV GPU, and either a single-core ARMv6-compatible CPU or a newer ARMv7-compatible quad-core one (in Pi 2); and 1 GB of RAM (in Pi 2), 512 MB (in Pi 1 models B and B+), or 256 MB (in models A and A+, and in the older model B). They have a Secure Digital (SDHC) slot (models A and B) or a MicroSDHC one (models A+, B+, and Pi 2) for boot media and persistent storage. In 2014, the Raspberry Pi Foundation launched the Compute Module, for use as a part of embedded systems for the same compute power as the original Pi. In early February 2015, the next-generation Raspberry Pi, Raspberry Pi 2, was released. That new computer board is initially available only in one configuration (model B) and has a quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 CPU and 1 GB of RAM with remaining specifications being similar to those of the previous generation model B+. The Raspberry Pi 2 retains the same US$35 price point of the model B, with the US$20 model A+ remaining on sale. In November 2015, the Foundation launched the Raspberry Pi Zero, a smaller product priced at US$5.
IBM POWER may refer to:
Power Systems is IBM's Power Architecture-based server line.
Before the Power Systems line was announced on April 2, 2008, IBM had two distinct Power-based lines: the System i running IBM i (formerly i5/OS and OS/400) - and the System p series running AIX or Linux.
IBM had two distinct Power Architecture based hardware lines since the early 1990s. Servers running processors based on the PowerPC-AS in the AS/400 (later iSeries, then System i) family running OS/400 (later i5/OS) and the POWER and PowerPC based servers and workstations in RS/6000 (later pSeries, then System p) running AIX and Linux.
They merged to use essentially the same hardware platform in 2001/2002 with the introduction of the POWER4 processor. After that, there was little difference between both the "p" and the "i" hardware; the only differences were in the software and services offerings. With the introduction of the POWER5 processor in 2004, even the product numbering was synchronized. The System i5 570 was virtually identical to the System p5 570.
Written and Edited by: kablaa Main Website: https://hackucf.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/HackUCF Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HackUCF/ More resources: https://github.com/kablaa/CTF-Workshop Music: "Voice Over Under" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ "Twisted" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ www.bensound.com http://www.purple-planet.com/
The class materials are available at http://www.OpenSecurityTraining.info/IntroX86.html Follow us on Twitter for class news @OpenSecTraining. The playlist for this class is here: http://bit.ly/IILMeN The full quality video can be downloaded at http://archive.org/details/opensecuritytraining Intel processors have been a major force in personal computing for more than 30 years. An understanding of low level computing mechanisms used in Intel chips as taught in this course by Xeno Kovah serves as a foundation upon which to better understand other hardware, as well as many technical specialties such as reverse engineering, compiler design, operating system design, code optimization, and vulnerability exploitation. 25% of the time will be spent bootstrapping knowledge of fully OS-independent...
Have you ever wondered why AMD and Intel have little competition? I explain it here. If you have any more information on this, or I messed up somewhere, please do let me know in a comment! Written version: http://techteamgb.co.uk/2017/01/18/x86-cpus-intel-amd-no-competition/ Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86 https://www.reddit.com/r/hardware/comments/3b0ytk/discussion_what_is_an_x86_license_and_why_do/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_x86_manufacturers https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrix https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VIA_Technologies http://www.viatech.com/en/ https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/via-corporate/via-financials/annual/annual_2014.pdf http://www.xe.com/currencyconverter/convert/?Amount=1563597000&From;=TWD&To;=USD https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmeta https://web....
Compare x86 architecture to IBM Power Systems. Here is a facts based analysis by leading research firm Solitaire Interglobal, Ltd. Discover why the foundation for your next generation applications should be IBM Power Systems. Learn more at http://www.ibm.com/systems/de/power
This presentation was recorded at GOTO Chicago 2014 http://gotochgo.com Matt Godbolt - Low-latency C++ Developer ABSTRACT It's easy to treat the CPU that executes our code as a black box, but understanding what really goes on inside it can help you write more efficient code. In this talk, Matt will lift the lid on modern x86 processors. He'll explain some of their [...] Download slides and read the full abstract here: https://gotocon.com/chicago-2014/presentation/x86%20Internals%20for%20Fun%20and%20Profit https://twitter.com/gotochgo https://www.facebook.com/GOTOConference http://gotocon.com
Have you ever fascinated by the term x86 that you find always in a computer tech forum...?? Have you ever thought of that your Windows computer cannot run programs of your Android or IOS device natively even tough it has got a lot of horsepower inside it..?? You know 64-Bit is faster than 32-Bit but have you ever thought of why...?? Well if yes then this video will try to break you questions down by looking at some key aspects of a processor.Hope you like it. This video is one of the many Texplained Videos coming out in the future where I would try to break down the complex Tech into simple and understandable language..!!! Thanks for watching and if you do like the content please Subscribe and Like the video because there are much more content coming out in the future....!! Like us on F...
We've tried Android x86 on UDOO X86 Ultra and works amazingly! Here's what it looks like.
Campaign Link: http://bit.ly/udoo-x86 Since Raspberry Pi 3 is the most adopted single board computer we wondered: how does UDOO X86 compare to Raspberry Pi 3? Here's how. In order to guarantee a fair game we focused on software available for both platforms. As you know, UDOO X86 is way more powerful than Raspberry Pi 3, so we decided to give a little handicap to UDOO X86. :) In other words we used a Full HD screen for Raspberry Pi 3 and a 4K screen for UDOO X86. So, consider that in this video UDOO X86 is processing four times the pixels that Raspberry Pi 3 is processing. Finally, for the video we are using the UDOO X86 Advanced demo board with Intel Celeron N3150 up to 2.08 GHz, with 4 GB of RAM. In other words, a less powerful model than UDOO X86 Advanced and incredibly less powerf...
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