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The most expensive Compute Module now costs $95. Raspberry Pi also offers an optional passive heatsink that covers the entire Compute Module for $5.
The Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 (CM5) is a versatile system-on-a-module designed for industrial and individual developer applications, supporting projects like IoT devices and AI systems.
At the core of the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 lies a high-performance processor, engineered to deliver exceptional computing power while maintaining energy efficiency.
The latest Raspberry Pi Compute Module runs cooler under heavy loads and is now available with up to 32GB storage.
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 has unveiled the new Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4, a stripped-down Raspberry Pi 4 Model B, which is available today from $25.
The Compute Module 4 turned up in 2020, a year after the Raspberry Pi 4. The Compute Module 5 has followed a similar pattern, arriving just over a year after the Raspberry Pi 5 debuted.
Prices for a Radxa CM4 start at $70 for a model with 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage, while a similarly-configured Radxa CM5 ...
The first Compute Module was released in 2014, and now the Raspberry Pi Foundation has launched a new version that’s based on the Raspberry Pi 3.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation's Compute Module is the perfect solution for applications that don't need full connectivity.
Raspberry Pi's new Compute Module 3 has serious competition coming its way from the maker of the $15 Pine64 board computer.
The Compute Module, which is intended for industrial applications, was first released in April 2014 with the same CPU as the first-generation Raspberry Pi.