by Jonathan Updated Oct 8, 2024 Published Oct 8, 2024 Raspberry Pi News
18650 Cells, active cooler, Bottom Hat, ethernet, gen 2, gen 3, Hacker Gadgets, hats, James Chambers, Michael Klements, nvme, pcie, pi 5, Pi Benchmarks, pi os, poe, power over ethernet, power supply, raspberry pi, raspberry pi 5, Sabrent Rocket, Test Power, Thermal Test, Top Hat, ups
Are you looking to add functionality to your Raspberry Pi 5 with a hat? In this video, I tried 3 new hats on the market to help you decide which one is the best fit for your project. These include a low profile NVMe hat, a Power over Ethernet or PoE hat which also...
by Jonathan Updated Oct 2, 2024 Published Oct 2, 2024 Raspberry Pi News
18650 Cells, active cooler, Bottom Hat, ethernet, gen 2, gen 3, Hacker Gadgets, hats, James Chambers, Michael Klements, nvme, pcie, pi 5, Pi Benchmarks, pi os, poe, power over ethernet, power supply, raspberry pi, raspberry pi 5, Sabrent Rocket, Test Power, Thermal Test, Top Hat, ups
Are you looking to add functionality to your Raspberry Pi 5 with a hat? In this video, I tried 3 new hats on the market to help you decide which one is the best fit for your project. These include a low profile NVMe hat, a Power over Ethernet or PoE hat which also...
by Jonathan Updated Nov 17, 2023 Published Nov 17, 2023 Raspberry Pi News
accessory, adapter, addon, attached, benchmark, boot, bootloader, bottom, config, configure, controlled, debian, edit, eeprom, expansion, express, ffc, flash, format, fpc, gen 2, gen 3, guide, hab, hardware, hat, header, high speed, howto, impedance, Jeff Geerling, linux, matched, nvme, on, pci, pcie, performance, pi, pi os, pineberry pi, process, raspberry pi, sbc, setup, shielding, speed, ssd, stability, storage, top, tutorial
The Pineberry Pi HatDrive! is a series of HATs that use the new PCIe connection on the Raspberry Pi 5. How fast can we get our SSD to go? Can you overclock the Raspberry Pi’s PCIe bus? Special thanks to Pineberry Pi for sending these two evaluation boards (they...
by Jonathan Updated May 14, 2021 Published May 14, 2021 Raspberry Pi News
12g, 24g, 48g, adapter, backplane, benchmark, broadcom, Cables, card, chia, cm4, cm6, compute module, computers, computing, controller, cryptocurrency, elrond, enterprise, flash, gen 2, gen 4, hard drive, HDD, hot-plug, hot-swap, intel, io board, Jeff Geerling, kioxia, lanes, megaraid, nvme, pci express, pcie, performance, pm6, raid, raspberry pi, sas, servers, SFF-TA-1001, SFF-TA-1005, solid state drive, ssd, storage, surprise, surprise plug, test, tri-mode, u.2, u.3, u2, u3, ubm, universal backplane management
It took some convincing, but KIOXIA sent me two of their latest Enterprise SSDs, the PM6 SAS 24G drive, and the CM6 PCIe NVMe drive, and I test them using the MegaRAID card and ‘Elrond’ storage enclosure sent to me by Broadcom. How do the drives perform?...