{"id":9099,"date":"2019-06-25T09:14:46","date_gmt":"2019-06-24T23:14:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/reckoner.com.au\/?p=9099"},"modified":"2019-06-25T09:14:46","modified_gmt":"2019-06-24T23:14:46","slug":"the-new-raspberry-pi-4-has-up-to-4gb-of-ram-dual-4k-support","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/reckoner.com.au\/news\/the-new-raspberry-pi-4-has-up-to-4gb-of-ram-dual-4k-support\/","title":{"rendered":"The new Raspberry Pi 4 has up to 4GB of RAM & dual 4K support"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/p>\n

I have three Raspberry Pis in my home. One runs the amazing ad blocking software Pi-hole<\/a>, another serves as smarthome hub running Hass.io<\/a> and the last (and oldest) I got to build a smart mirror that’s going nowhere fast.<\/p>\n

None of those make use of the true power the Raspberry Pi now affords. Today’s announcement of the Raspberry Pi 4 (Model B) shows just how far the tiny US$35 (A$59.95) computer has come.<\/p>\n

Available in three configurations with either 1GB, 2GB or 4GB of RAM the new RPi4 now also includes Gigabit Ethernet, WiFi, BLE 5.0, 2 x USB2, 2x USB3 and dual mini HDMI ports that both push 4K!<\/p>\n

For under US$40 you’re getting quite the little pocket-rocket. Sure it’s not going to replace your video editing suite anytime soon but for an everyday word processing & web browsing terminal an RPi could very well replace a lot of people’s ageing desktops.<\/p>\n

Both the 1GB and 2GB models are available immediately with the 4GB shipping on July 1st.<\/p>\n

Australian orders can be placed through RPi’s local resellers:\u00a0Core Electronics<\/a> & PiAustralia<\/a>.<\/p>\n