![]() Also, there’s a chance that Raspberry Pi may develop its own SoC, although chances of having one as early as in a Raspberry Pi 5 is highly unlikely. It’s highly unlikely that Raspberry Pi will this time go with a different manufacturer, therefore another beefed-up Broadcom SoC can be expected to be in the Raspberry Pi 5, probably in the range of 2GHz base clock. The last member of the Broadcom SoC family to end up in a Raspberry Pi was the Broadcom BCM2711, Quad core Cortex-A72 (ARM v8) 64-bit SoC, which comes as the main processor of the Raspberry Pi 4B. Raspberry Pi has always been in partnership with Broadcom, trusting their line of SoC to be the heart of the Raspberry Pi lineup. To answer the question, let’s first discuss the key aspects of a general-purpose single board computer which are most sought-after. Before going any deeper – have a Raspberry Pi 3 or 4 ? it’s time to manage & access it remotely using JFrog Connect
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