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A Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+. The Raspberry Pi Foundation is a charitable organisation registered with the Charity Commission for England and Wales. [4] The board of trustees was assembled by 2008, [1] [7] and the Raspberry Pi Foundation was founded as a registered charity in May 2009 in Caldecote, England. [4]
In 2014, the Raspberry Pi Foundation hired a number of its community members including ex-teachers and software developers to launch a set of free learning resources for its website. [287] The Foundation also started a teacher training course called Picademy with the aim of helping teachers prepare for teaching the new computing curriculum ...
One of the company's objectives was to make the product affordable to schools and school children and, in 2015, it launched the Raspberry Pi Zero at a selling price of US$5 or £4. [ 4 ] In 2021, Raspberry Pi (Trading) Ltd changed its name to Raspberry Pi Ltd. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] Its newly-formed holding company, Raspberry Pi Holdings, was the subject ...
The MagPi is the official Raspberry Pi magazine. It started off life as a free [1] fanzine for users of the Raspberry Pi computer. It was created by the community [2] [3] as an unofficial volunteer produced Raspberry Pi publication [4] and in 2015 was handed over to the Raspberry Pi Foundation to be run in-house as the official Raspberry Pi magazine. [5]
Raspberry Pi OS is a Unix-like operating system based on the Debian Linux distribution for the Raspberry Pi family of compact single-board computers. Raspbian was developed independently in 2012, became the primary operating system for these boards since 2013, was originally optimized for the Raspberry Pi 1 and distributed by the Raspberry Pi Foundation. [3]
David John Braben OBE FREng (born 2 January 1964) is an English video game developer and designer, founder and President of Frontier Developments, and co-creator of the Elite series of space trading video games, first published in 1984. [1]
RP2040 is a 32-bit dual ARM Cortex-M0+ microcontroller integrated circuit [1] [2] [3] by Raspberry Pi Ltd. In January 2021, it was released as part of the Raspberry Pi Pico board. [1] Its successor is the RP2350 series.
Sonic Pi is a live coding environment based on Ruby, originally designed to support both computing and music lessons in schools, developed by Sam Aaron in the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory [1] in collaboration with Raspberry Pi Foundation.