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Ask HN: Where to find raspberry Pi zero or alternative under $15
8 points by bedros on July 24, 2017 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments
I need about five for a diy project at home, but every where I look online you can order only one per customer, with $10 shipping per unit



Unfortunately the CHIP ($9) hasn't shipped for a couple of months while they revamp their CPU. I have a few and they truly are exceptional hardware and probably better than the Zero for your needs due to onboard wifi, bluetooth and 4GB of storage.

https://getchip.com/pages/chip

Its big brother CHIP Pro ($16) can be ordered in any quantity but you will need to solder your own headers. Depending on what you want to do it might be a good fit:

https://getchip.com/pages/chippro

Pine also has a $15 board that seems to be shipping:

https://www.pine64.org/?product=pine-a64-board


I found the CHIP to be a bit unreliable (eg. only one of half a dozen Micro USB cables I have works for flashing)

Then again, I don’t have a lot of experience with these DIY things, maybe random issues with everything are just to be expected.


Flashing can be a bit iffy, it being made as a Chrome extension is a weird choice. I never had any big issues with flashing, and once the device is running, I find it more stable than any of the Pis that I have, as the Pis always tend to get a corrupted filesystem within 6-12 months. They can blame SD all they want, there's something wrong with the chipset.


I have had really good luck with these boards. http://nanopi.io/nanopi-neo-air.html

$20 but they do not need a permanent SD card and they need a heat sink. The Allwinner CPU's seem to get much hotter than the Raspi Broadcoms. The issues I have experienced really have been nuances of the Linux distros but very workable.


they look great, do they have usable I2C, GPIO libs with support for python of I'm assuming they support some version of ubuntu/debian


While I understand the Pi Foundations "one per order/customer" rule - I share your frustration. There's a bunch of ideas I've got where 10 or so Pi Zeros would be both useful and affordable @ $5 ea or even $10 for the ZeroW, but I just can't buy them like that...

I wanted to make a "real working" diagram of our standard AWS platform as a wall chart - with 3 ELB load balancers, 5 autoscaling ec2 instances (3 "active" and two "spares"), and 3 "multi-az" RDS db servers - each represented by a Pi Zero, with ws2811 led strip running between them representing the network which lights up animating packet/data flow. It'd have big red killswitches next to everything, so you can push buttons to kill off bits of infrasructure and visualise how the platform responds (with the spare ec2 instances autoscaling in to replace dead ones, ELB and RDS traffic auto-rerouting). And I'd use this to run our "standard" backend, so people could connect with their phone (with a browser or test app) and "see" their own network traffic and watch how it still works even if you kill any 2 and up to 8 different parts in the right combination.

I think that'd be a really useful way to demonstrate to non-technical stakeholders why if they want better response times that "we'll get to that Monday morning" when something breaks after 5pm on a Friday - I'm going to charge them _way_ more to support their site if it's running on a $5 or $10 per month VPS than if they spend $120/month or so on AWS to host it.

(Oh, and I second zapt02's recommendation for the NextThing CHIP - I've got half a dozen of those, and they're working out really well in other projects - but I've also got another 5 on order and have been waiting several month for em...)




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