48%
30.01.2024
256GB DDR4 ECC PC4-19200 2,400MHz
Storage
4x3.5-inch drive bays, slimline optical drive, LSI SAS 3008 12Gbps SAS (6Gbps SATA)
Networking
Intel I217 and I210 Gigabit Ethernet
48%
07.10.2025
.
Figure 3: Port repositioning between the Pi 400 [5] and Pi 500 [6] provides a choice of screen placement. Do you prefer the left, or the right side? © Raspberry PI
Going Cyberpunk
In addition
48%
17.02.2015
Xino-Lime
Linux
All-winner A10 processor
Single ARM Cortex-A8 @1GHz
Mali-400
512MB DDR3
SATA connector, 2 USB, Fast Ethernet, USB OTG, HDMI
1.9W
$44/EUR 30
48%
15.02.2012
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
256KB < < 512KB
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
3
512KB < < 1MB
3
2
2
48%
26.01.2012
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
256KB < < 512KB
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
3
512KB < < 1MB
3
2
2
46%
06.10.2022
bytes (419 MB, 400 MiB) copied, 0.535233 s, 784 MB/s
root@focal:~# dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/encrypted-ram0 bs=4k count=100k
102400+0 records in
102400+0 records out
419430400 bytes (419 MB, 400 Mi
46%
21.01.2021
May 1988
AMD K6-2
MMX and 3DNOW! SIMD, 200–570MHz; 64KiB L1 cache
Jun 1998
Pentium II Xeon
SIMD; L2 cache from 512KB to 2MB
Feb 1999
Pentium III
9
45%
11.02.2016
553200 0 22908 348 23076 1143 2880 6 3 57 35 0 <- < I/O System loaded (wa) >
0 3 265376 149720 1136 378148 0 105300 252 105348 993 3002 6 4 62 29 0
0 14 495028 117264 560
44%
31.10.2025
(3 or 6Gbps) with up to 4TB capacity. Typically, you can deploy 2.5- or 3.5-inch formats; of the devices we tested, only Buffalo and Netgear did not bother providing drill holes for smaller disks
44%
31.10.2025
password 8 ZDF339a.20a3E
05 log file /var/log/quagga/zebra.log
06 service password-encryption
07 !
08 interface eth0
09 multicast
10 ipv6 nd suppress-ra
11 !
12 interface eth1
13 ip address 10