• Optional
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    2375 months ago

    Going public will fuck them up. Every corporate move will be tied to the stock. It will inevitably destroy them.

    Which, at this point, I’m here for. Although I do miss the days when they were a force for good. Or at least nerds. Ah well. Sayonara, you insulting bastards.

      • Aniki 🌱🌿
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        605 months ago

        Considering I could order an Orange Pi with 32gb of ram and still cant get a Rp5… yeah the king is dead.

      • @Evilcoleslaw@lemmy.world
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        525 months ago

        A couple years of not being able to buy them anywhere close to MSRP did enough damage I guess. Plus it exposed people to some alternatives.

      • @yggstyle@lemmy.world
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        355 months ago

        For the price you can by a pretty competent n100 based mini PC which beats the hell out of the pi for a lot of tasks. Makers can get a cheaper solution via esp32 or clones… so what real market is there for it?

        Pi isn’t dead but the IPO would be a hail mary for funding while they figure out how not to go bankrupt.

      • SaltySalamander
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        175 months ago

        Considering they retail for about what you can get a decent used mini PC for, one which would run circles around a Pi, I can certainly see why. At its current price, I would never consider a Pi.

    • @kby@feddit.de
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      5 months ago

      The RPi was always very overpriced. I think they knew they were selling a lifestyle product from day 1, you know, “here’s the new toy for the tech crowd that has too much money anyway”. Sometimes I cannot believe what ridiculous sums of cash people give out for SoCs with custom cases that are definitely not worth the pay-up, ex. the whole clockworkOS computers which got abandoned by the manufacturer few months going forward, and the massive financial hurdle to become a part of the user community means the community/fan crowd just implodes as soon as the tech bros find a more shiny device to waste money on. Then all you got is abandoned hardware with no community support.

      • @Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The pi at initial release before all the supply chain problems, and Pi’s focus on corporate customers was $20.

        There was nothing like it which is why it deserved the hype.

        But now it’s $75 and needs a custom USB c power supply. So it’s pointless for most uses. As another pointed out, an N100 on the high end and esp32 on the low end make it a tiny niche.

  • @redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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    1805 months ago

    I don’t expect people to see any change in how we do things.

    When companies say this, they’ll usually do the exact opposite later down the line.

    • yeehaw
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      5 months ago

      Exactly that’s just bullshit to make people think everything is gonna be fine. It’s the stock market. People with the most shares demand you make them more money. That’s how it works. So everything will be turned upside down at some point.

    • @JakenVeina@lemm.ee
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      255 months ago

      Stating outright that you don’t expect the obvious thing that always happens to happen… bro you’re already giving shareholders a reason to say you’re an incompetent manager and replace you with someone that will gut the company for stock growth.

    • @LemmyTryThisOut@lemmy.world
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      155 months ago

      When you hear this from any company, get out. Sell whatever you have in it immediately. Even if you take a loss, you’ll take a bigger one waiting it out.

    • @unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      Its been coming for a while tho. They abandoned the affordable market long ago. Buy banana pis or other knockoffs, those have been better than the raspberry versions for a long time anyways…

      • @ashok36@lemmy.world
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        135 months ago

        How did they abandon the affordable market? You can get a 1GB pi 4 for $35 today, the same price as when it launched. You get get a zero 2 for $15 I think. Just because the pi 5 is more expensive doesn’t mean they’ve abandoned the affordable market. They just widened the product line. Jeez.

      • @Vex_Detrause@lemmy.ca
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        115 months ago

        How is the community on the alternatives? I always hear that raspberry Pis is easier to beginners due to the community. Alternatives are cheaper and faster but doesn’t have a big community so not too user friendly.

        • downhomechunk [chicago]
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          115 months ago

          I started with rockchip devices because I couldn’t get a real rpi. I had no trouble getting help for anything I was trying to do.

        • ferret
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          15 months ago

          Depends on what you get, grab an Ox64 to be thrown in the deep deep end, while anything that supports Armbian will be just fine.

    • @ripcord@lemmy.world
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      85 months ago

      They don’t just want more money. He wants a huge payout for retirement. And fuxk everyone else.

  • toiletobserver
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    1245 months ago

    You either die the hero, or live long enough to become the villain.

  • @ilmagico@lemmy.world
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    935 months ago

    Didn’t they start as a non-profit? But I guess, as someone I know used to say, there’s one god everybody worships: the money god.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      45 months ago

      Oh no, please no. They were supposed to be the best of us.

      No King rules forever.

  • @bartolomeo@suppo.fi
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    835 months ago

    Oh no, the tipping point for enshitification. First it was selling all the stock to corporate clients, now this.

    • Ann Archy
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      5 months ago

      It’s going to be a cash flinging fest. Sign up for the IPO, put your money there, sell in the next days. I am no day trader but I don’t know of a single time I’ve heard of an IPO that wasn’t heavily pumped for the first hours and days. Not that I’m a filthy capitalist swine who would do such a thing, I’m just saying.

      • @AAA@feddit.de
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        105 months ago

        All kinds of IPO don’t live up to their expectations. Facebook went down hard back in the day, for example.

        • Ann Archy
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          5 months ago

          I think like this: “oh, that sounds cool and smart and has a catchy brand, a lot of people will buy things that sound cool and smart and have catchy brands, so let’s [hypothetically] buy that then sell it right after before the hype dies out in the face of reality”

    • @Cheesus@lemmy.world
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      65 months ago

      It’s good for existing share holders. IPOs can be bad for investors too. I wouldn’t want to touch this stock

  • Chaotic Entropy
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    555 months ago

    I don’t think I’ve ever been excited about the IPO of a company I’m a customer of. This trend continues.

    • Ann Archy
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      55 months ago

      “Go forth, and procreate” has come to mean “amass, forever”.

  • @UnPassive@lemmy.world
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    485 months ago

    My first Pi got me into computing which led to my software career now. Won it from a YouTube giveaway and kept it a secret because I wasn’t allowed to have a computer. Put retroPi on it and told my parents it was for gaming. Coded my first game in Python (from a tutorial). I once put it in a crayon box and used that as a portable handheld. Later. Made a janky arcade cabinet. Sad that my kids may need to use a different brand device. I have no love for public companies

      • @UnPassive@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        They were scared of unmonitored access to the internet. And only up to T rated games were allowed, so for Halo I used to trade game cases with friends to hide what I owned. And since my parents were extremely Snoopy, I’d even switch my T rated games around so they thought I was just too lazy to match a game disk with it’s case, and never get too suspicious.

        Edit: Programming was allowed, just had to be on the shared computer in our living room where everyone could see what you were doing.

        When I was leaving for college I bought a laptop and they made me keep it in the box until I left. It was honesty torture. I wanted to set it up and stuff but they insisted that our home computer would work fine…

        • Ann Archy
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          35 months ago

          Not to be too personal, but did that affect you a lot later in life, I mean the constant being on guard and fear of getting caught, to always have a lie ready to go and be nervous all the time? I find that if affects most people like that, but roughly one in five instead become super chill and really get their shit sorted. I’m not going anywhere specific with this, I just got curious from an academic and personal experience pov.

          • @UnPassive@lemmy.world
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            55 months ago

            Yeah definitely some lasting consequence. I’m a pretty good liar, and extremely skilled at manipulating people to calm down. Sometimes I wish I stood my ground better and let there be friction between me and others. Instead I sort of morph into whatever they need, sometimes abandoning my core principals. It came in handy to save my siblings’ asses a few times though. But literally just yesterday my wife was video calling her mom and showed her my brand new ear piercings (which I’ve wanted my whole life, but is a huge no no for men in Mormon circles, so it’ll be a big deal when my side of the family finds out) - anyway, I wanna stretch/gauge them because I like the look of small tunnels, so my mother in law says, “they look so nice, but you won’t gauge them, right?” And I’m like “no of course not” because I know it’s probably a bit shocking to her that I pierced them at all. But I wish I instead said something non-commital like “not now, but I love the look of small gauges”

            Overall, the biggest effect is probably the distance I feel towards my parents lol

            If your curious, I’d describe myself as quite chill, but very reserved. I wouldn’t even say I was constantly on guard… I was just a good liar. Got caught for very few things. I have a lot of siblings though (10), so I doubt I’d have had as much opportunity if I were an only child or something

            • Ann Archy
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              5 months ago

              manipulating people to calm down.

              There are worse uses! It’s like I thought, you’re one of the good ones.

              edit:

              a big deal when my side of the family finds out

              I am sorry my man. That’s some silly shit for anyone to get upset about. Grats on the pierces! I got fuck drunk at a festival when I was 16 and came home to mom and dad with pierced eyebrows. There were some very very frowny faces at home for some time, but I got away with it. I think they knew that ultimately, I don’t give a shit what they think. I just happen to, but I don’t have’ta. Good thing with many siblings. Then you can flow around them and disappear in the crowd so to speak. Peace.

      • Chaotic Entropy
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        35 months ago

        Can’t have a “computer” but can have an entertainment system, I guess.

        • @UnPassive@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          It was more about moral concerns of the internet. Pretty common thing for Mormon parents to do. But yeah entertainment may have played a role, they weren’t exactly what I’d call “active” parents.

          • Chaotic Entropy
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            25 months ago

            Sure, that’s the sort of thing I was alluding to. Not wanting to give a child a more capable system, while still giving them a distraction box.

    • Ann Archy
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      5 months ago

      I was basically handed a C64 straight outta the womb, and I think I’ve been so spoiled by having such free access to devices and technology, and be able to just tag along for the ride of the IT revolution, so I didn’t bother to learn to code.

      I just figured that down the line they’d come up with AI that could code for me, and while I was right, I really could have learned coding and be a total IT pimp by now. Now I’m just an IT chump, which is still nice, but still.

      There’s something to be said of deprivation. If all you’ve got to play with is sticks and stones, that’s when your mind come up with the sickest creations.

      • @UnPassive@lemmy.world
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        25 months ago

        My wife and I have wondered about this idea. If we were to have kids, we’d want them to be tech savy and inventive, but hopefully not get too addicted to the internet at a young age. There’s something to be said about not buying them a computer, but letting them build one, I think. But it’s an odd line to walk.

        Definitely will say I was interested in what I couldn’t have, but I do think there are healthier ways to fuel an interest. Hope that someday my kids will just want to tinker with my stuff

  • @JCreazy@midwest.social
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    455 months ago

    I lost my respect for the raspberry pi foundation when they prioritize businesses over everybody else when there was a shortage.

    • @xuniL@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      95 months ago

      If you don’t need any of the Pi specific features. Then buy a sbc from another brand. You get way more for your money and more features

        • @wispy_jsp@lemmy.world
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          45 months ago

          There’s a huge amount variety between the alternative sbc providers, but I’m general:

          • some are simply designed not to have various bits of hardware like the camera 22 pin connector.
          • some fail to conform to the pis pin out or footprint, so hats won’t be compatible
          • more commonly, documentation and support is so poor that extensive dev/Linux experience is required to get existing hardware to work

          All of this makes it difficult to utilize alternatives without conducting considerable research into many different ones.

  • @nintendiator@feddit.cl
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    425 months ago

    Of all the things I expected to enshittify during 2024 I certainly didn’t expect we’d start with the Pi.