Eben Upton - The Story of Raspberry Pi

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  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
  • Eben Upton, founder of the Raspberry Pi Foundation, talks about the Raspberry Pi, how it came to be and the ups and downs of bringing his £25 computer to market.
    Part of the Centre for Computing History Viva Computer project funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund.
    www.ComputingHistory.org.uk
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 95

  • @KinoHaitsma
    @KinoHaitsma Před 5 lety +5

    Very nice interview. Interesting to get the background from Eben. Don't get the complaints about the audio quality, there's nothing wrong with it, I can follow it and am not even a native speaker/

  • @luisgonzalez1637
    @luisgonzalez1637 Před 4 lety +3

    Shoutout Broadcom for believing in the project

  • @Neffers_UK
    @Neffers_UK Před 6 lety +1

    Great interview, slowly catching up with the stuf on your channel, it's been great so far, even the stuff I thought would not have been personally interesting has been great to watch. More recent stuff please, I cannot find the time nor afford to come and see your centre, but I love the place regardless.

  • @MainlyWebStuff
    @MainlyWebStuff Před 2 lety

    Thanks for posting this - great to hear the background to the project.

  • @freeflaminginfinite917
    @freeflaminginfinite917 Před 8 lety +4

    Glad it all came together the way it did, and keep up the rapid product evolution.

  • @TheStevenWhiting
    @TheStevenWhiting Před 8 lety +8

    The background with all the BBCs reminds me of our setup at school back in the late 80s :) I've always liked those BBC monitors.

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting Před 8 lety +1

      Was two to a BBC. I never got a look in, was always stuck with an arse who hogged the machine.

    • @DanEllis
      @DanEllis Před 7 lety +1

      I always hated those monitors. The CRT generated a lot of static, and the case was earthed metal, so... ouch, a lot.

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting Před 7 lety +1

      Never had that experience. For me, the monitors are just about the nostalgia :)

    • @axemanbob
      @axemanbob Před 4 lety

      @@DanEllis Yes, yes and thrice yes... ZAP!

    • @eliotmansfield
      @eliotmansfield Před 3 lety

      CUB monitors

  • @KaitainCPS
    @KaitainCPS Před 6 lety +17

    I think there's a *little* bit of an underestimation of how much the 8 bit micro boom in the UK cut across socioeconomic bands. A lot of working class kids became programmers, often using Sinclair machines. Sure, the middle classes were still disproportionately represented, but it was an unusually meritocratic new path in Thatcher's Britain.

    • @avaughan585
      @avaughan585 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately in our primary school of mostly working class kids, we had one BBC Micro and it would only come out of the cupboard on rainy days and used more like a reward or positive reinforcement for kids' behaviour so we weren't given much time on it. The school probably didn't have the funding or the skills to know how to get the most out of the BBC Micro. The only software for it was Granny's Garden and a paint/draw program. I don't think it cut across socioeconomic bands as much as was probably hoped.

  • @edwardzubrzycki5367
    @edwardzubrzycki5367 Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you for the very interesting interview x

  • @brandonfesser1893
    @brandonfesser1893 Před 8 lety +3

    We love you, Eben and Liz!

    • @unlokia
      @unlokia Před 5 lety +1

      _"we"_ ? Maybe you do, but I am unsure how I can _"love"_ people I've never met. Maybe... respect, or admire would be more apt.

  • @sneekylinux
    @sneekylinux Před 7 lety +8

    What a very interesting interview....nice.

    • @KarenBear
      @KarenBear Před 7 lety +1

      i like how his voice starts to rise and then gets quiet, lol,

  • @BananaTV1978
    @BananaTV1978 Před 7 lety +1

    He's bang on when he talks about Spectrum -> Atari ST vs BBC Micro to Amiga! Although in my case I was ZX Spectrum and never made to the Atari ST until the mid 90s!

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro Před 6 lety

      Banana Retro I remember him saying that before. My uncle had a spectrum and then an Amiga.

  • @jamesrichardson8488
    @jamesrichardson8488 Před 6 lety +2

    Shame there's no link to a circuit diagram for that breadboard pc/historical artifact.

  • @unlokia
    @unlokia Před 7 lety +18

    If you accidentally short circuit the Pi, or put too much voltage through it and kill it, I suppose one may say that you've _"Blown a raspberry"_
    ^_^

    • @kiloton1920
      @kiloton1920 Před rokem

      Or maybe you could say you just got pi’d

  • @julian.morgan
    @julian.morgan Před 6 lety +4

    Having read the comments I appreciate I'm not the first to say this but you REALLY need to get some compression or automate the levels on this video's audio! If you don't know how to do that and you want a hand with it then - because I think the content deserves to be heard - get in touch. You might also have some sort of phasing going on between the lavalier mic and the camera's mic? Not sure, but it really shouldn't be that hard to make considerably better . . . it's a shame to leave it as it is.

  • @JonathanSteadman2003
    @JonathanSteadman2003 Před 2 lety +1

    Raspberry Pi is amazing. I use it to run Manjaro. :)

  • @nikobellic570
    @nikobellic570 Před 6 lety +1

    Arise, Sir Eben!

  • @MartijnWismeijer
    @MartijnWismeijer Před 6 lety +8

    Eben looks like Jason Statham. :)

  • @KingCrimson82
    @KingCrimson82 Před 2 lety

    for me the best comapny and idea since the apple 1, easily.

  • @WARHERO388
    @WARHERO388 Před 2 lety

    Why is the raspberry pi still listed as a product that you can buy?

  • @KarlHamilton
    @KarlHamilton Před rokem

    Legend 🙌

  • @sukanave
    @sukanave Před 2 lety

    Raspberry pi has such high potential for the future and with the right people It can revolutionize the world

  • @verdadesconhecimentos7038

    Gênio 🇧🇷

  • @full_bearfull_bear4783

    Legend.

  • @hanro50
    @hanro50 Před 3 lety

    My Raspberry Pi is running swimmingly atm.
    -A happy South African with a Raspberry Pi.

    • @jonnamechange6854
      @jonnamechange6854 Před 3 lety

      Where is the entry point for a noob?

    • @hanro50
      @hanro50 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jonnamechange6854 just buy a pi, sd card, the special HDMI cable and the needed AC adaptor.
      I also recommend getting a case. However if you're not planning on running a server using the Pi. Then you can look out for the Pi 400 which is a more desktop esk form factor of the Pi 4.
      You can also look at various complete kits the Raspberry Pi foundation sells.

  • @jamesalanjob
    @jamesalanjob Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome interview. I have all the Pis, I particularly love the Zero W 2 and the Pico.

  • @BilalHeuser1
    @BilalHeuser1 Před 7 lety +3

    Nice video ... but I had turn up the volume all the way to be able to hear it all ....

    • @jonnamechange6854
      @jonnamechange6854 Před 3 lety

      And look up all the computer terms he casually reels off. I still have no idea how the thing works.

    • @ArumesYT
      @ArumesYT Před 2 lety

      @@jonnamechange6854 This video is not a tutorial.

  • @mikemouse1910
    @mikemouse1910 Před 5 lety +1

    Esto es perfecto hardware entendible, para variables de projecto abierto al inicio se buscaba integrar a la tecnología como un juego, el día de hoy es un mundo tecnológico a desarrollar, para desarrollo evolutivo de los seres humanos.🤓 Gracias por compartir.

  • @williamcorcoran8842
    @williamcorcoran8842 Před 3 lety +1

    The Raspi removes the economic factor and levels the playing field. It’s essentially the violin of the tech industry searching for the virtuosos across the entire socioeconomic spectrum. I know brilliant computer scientists and very poor students that use the raspi!

  • @Itzzmeagain28
    @Itzzmeagain28 Před 3 lety

    Wait. Is that..is that Jonathan Statham?? 😮

  • @aero33888
    @aero33888 Před 3 lety

    The thud from the board dropping is kinda horrifying.

  • @DouglasASean
    @DouglasASean Před 7 lety +13

    interesting but the audio is terrible

    • @philiprowney
      @philiprowney Před 6 lety +3

      Ebon does not enunciate at all, swallows so many words I gave up at 10:50. Pain in the arse!

    • @ArumesYT
      @ArumesYT Před 2 lety

      @@philiprowney If you visit a doctor for that pain anyway, let him check your ears as well.

  • @EdgyNumber1
    @EdgyNumber1 Před 7 lety +2

    Bring back BBC BASIC :'-(

  • @lucmorvan1867
    @lucmorvan1867 Před 2 lety

    I knew Jason Statham was worth more than all those bad movies ;-)

  • @patrickgrochowy
    @patrickgrochowy Před 6 lety +2

    The audio is terrible silent for the most parts and then for several syllables loud. Please adjust that (hint: compressor) and reupload the video ... :-)

  • @jarisipilainen3875
    @jarisipilainen3875 Před 6 lety +1

    raspberry pi 4 soon coming or is it google pi hahah

  • @bENOFFICIALMASSIVE
    @bENOFFICIALMASSIVE Před 6 lety

    He looks like that english action actor.....forgot his name

  • @kiloton1920
    @kiloton1920 Před rokem

    This guy likes to make eye contact about as much as eye do, I find it incredibly painful and hard to focus when I look people in the eyes while talking.

  • @srhyaekuau
    @srhyaekuau Před 7 lety +1

    Why is he raising his voice like that. Also, it would seem like he is somewhat discrediting soft skills by his hailing of math and its implied meritocracy.

  • @stuntedmonk
    @stuntedmonk Před 6 lety

    This, could be a candidate for ASMR submission! 😬

  • @JimmyCall
    @JimmyCall Před 2 lety

    Insulting him attacking Whites.

  • @rantg
    @rantg Před 7 lety

    and then he say "we wanted to get children's to be excited " about what? another development board which is much faster? like these kids would even be able to use 1% of its power? the whole story is strange to me. They made it for children where they used a power computer , they could have been use a 8 bit processor with 8Mhz.

    • @BananaTV1978
      @BananaTV1978 Před 7 lety +3

      You're thinking like an adult techie mate :) what the children are excited about the whole piece rather than the board itself. Don't look at the board, look at the whole thing. I know you're gonna say that Arduino or others deliver the same tech but they aren't supported, promoted or used in the say way.

    • @rantg
      @rantg Před 7 lety

      Really? you really think a f**ing processor of 1GHz is the right tool to teach kids to code? other platforms such as Little Bits, and others are pretty much better for kids. They say Pi is for education because today you need to set some "important purpose" to get your startup noticed. Luckily they got a good press and made an history. Saying thats what brings kids to learn how to code is, sorry to say, kind of bullshit.

    • @BananaTV1978
      @BananaTV1978 Před 7 lety +3

      Ron T ... A lot of it, like anything in life, is luck and timing. The spec isn't really relevant, what's happened is that this has caught peoples attention and peaked their interest. The other stuff that's out there - arguably much better I'm sure - hasn't done that.

    • @KaitainCPS
      @KaitainCPS Před 6 lety +1

      Running Linux and having access to all its various languages and toolchains is the real win.

    • @lucasward9506
      @lucasward9506 Před 3 lety +1

      its cool because you can do whatever what you want with it, people of all ages can use it. I have seen highschoolers use that much computing power with programs before.

  • @rantg
    @rantg Před 7 lety +4

    This conversation is very strange, the guy talks like he invented the new makers computer, where actually Arduino was there since 2006- when he built his AVR computer. He also say "this can only happen in UK or in silicon valley" , really? whats so special about his pcb? just a few chips that any good hardware engineer know how to set together. You have maybe 30 kinds of development boards most of them have been there very early , before the Pi. So its strange, he speaks like he invented the first personal computer, without a single word about Arduino and many many others that have been there before him and made a great job.

    • @BananaTV1978
      @BananaTV1978 Před 7 lety +4

      Yeah, the thing is Ron you have to look at the whole picture. What's been achieved is the package of releasing a board which generated a ton of interest and has created a sort of mini-industry in its own right; and there are a lot of projects around this computer now. Take your point there probably was the Arduino and I'm sure others, but the tech needs to generate interest to achieve its potential and we don't have kids and schools using Arduino.

    • @EnglishLaw
      @EnglishLaw Před 6 lety +2

      Yes, and PIC programming projects were big in the 90's so well before Arduino too.

    • @KaitainCPS
      @KaitainCPS Před 6 lety +6

      No, he said Cambridge, not the UK, and he's referring to the density of multi-disciplinary talents and networking possibilities, both tech and business.
      The achievement is in putting the system together at a very low cost and still being commercially viable. People who aren't professional engineers appear not to understand this.
      The Pi doesn't claim to be the pre-eminent makers computer. It's going for a slightly different market from that of Arduino and is doing different things. You may be mistakenly misapprehending the Pi through an Arduino hobbyist's lens.

    • @jamesrichardson8488
      @jamesrichardson8488 Před 6 lety +2

      Show a bit of respect, its Raspberry Pi! I see your point but let him tell his story. And as for Cambridge its the history back to bbc micro and archimedes and sinclair spectrum.

    • @philiprowney
      @philiprowney Před 6 lety +2

      He did, it was a full ARM not some cut down 8 bit RISC chip. Sounds like sour grapes, I built many circuits long before the RasPi, but, I'm not complaining about the product, just the kids mumbling :0þ
      Ron T how much was an OMAP Beagleboard, not $10, I'm sure, try $500 or $1,000 [ STILL $150 NOW ], again you only show your own ignorance because if you were prototyping products in the 00's [ like me ] you would have been happy if there was a PI.
      'Arduino' is a toy in comparison to the first PI.
      I heard CZcams commentors were even more ignorant than FaceBook users...
      PS that profile picture is me, I hide from no-one =]8¬_D

  • @superdoubt
    @superdoubt Před 5 lety +2

    This guy is extraordinarily difficult to understand, he whispers some words and talks very fast and slow which adds to the difficulty, not to mention the shitty audio work, too bad because I was interested what he has to say.

    • @jonnamechange6854
      @jonnamechange6854 Před 3 lety

      I was going to say try using the captions supplied, but they can't work out what he's saying either. He keeps talking into his chest at crucial moments of his explanations so you can't hear him. This is very common amongst industry pioneers.

    • @PotterPossum1989
      @PotterPossum1989 Před 2 lety

      The audio seems fine to me, but yes I always have a hard time understanding the British speech cadence.

    • @ArumesYT
      @ArumesYT Před 2 lety

      Try getting hearing aids. English is my 2nd language and I have no problems understanding him at a normal volume level.

  • @MrGeekGamer
    @MrGeekGamer Před 8 lety +1

    "Diversity"? Really?

    • @AlexandreEnkerli
      @AlexandreEnkerli Před 8 lety +6

      Oh yes! Quite so!
      Despite his talk of meritocracy in maths, he was able to identify a major issue affecting the world of technology since the mid-1980s. Which is part of the reason for the decrease in the number of young people getting into STEM, decades later. Though he’s an engineer, this is keen insight into the social system behind these developments.
      Also, that lack of diversity has been involved in a lot of groupthink. Much easier to stick to a given paradigm when everyone comes from the same socioeconomic background. We saw that in finance, close to a decade ago. It’s now biting the computer world.
      Of course, there’s been a lot of STEM enthusiasm outside the UK and US. It might take a while before we get a full understanding of how the world will change, but the South Asian presence in STEM programs (in North America, at least) is already a sign of something happening.

    • @EnglishLaw
      @EnglishLaw Před 6 lety +1

      Yes, transvestite muslims are coming

    • @davidrenton
      @davidrenton Před 3 lety

      @@AlexandreEnkerli Diversity in STEM was never an employer issue , it's a fundamental problem of Education and what student's where encourage or discouraged from learning , plus Parents share a role in this as well.
      In America and your Google and you want to hire more African American's as top level engineer's , but they simply aren't for whatever reason going into that field, then what's Google to do, they deal with the end result of economic, school's , local government, cultural issues more than saying Google won't hire them.

  • @danielgabriel5539
    @danielgabriel5539 Před rokem

    Booooring 😴😴😴😴😴

  • @maxi-g
    @maxi-g Před 2 lety

    damn what language is he talking, this can‘t be british english

  • @IkarusKommt
    @IkarusKommt Před 6 lety +1

    What is a purpose of a $60 computer, without:
    - power supply
    - video port
    - case
    - x86 compatibility
    and with:
    - a flimsy microUSB power port
    - connectors on 3 sides?
    That's just a waste of radio components.

    • @RPiSpy
      @RPiSpy Před 6 lety +4

      You can choose to buy a power supply or use one you already have. Saves being forced to buy a supply you don't need. The Pi has composite output and HDMI. Again no point forcing a case on people. Different projects need different cases. Much nicer to keep the price lower and let people sort out their own case. Not sure why you would want x86 compatibility ...

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro Před 6 lety +4

      IkarusKommt A computer doesn't need a case to work, and neither does it need X86 compatibility. The pi isn't $60 is it? It has a video port and you can get a power supply for it.

    • @davetriplett8109
      @davetriplett8109 Před 5 lety

      ..but yeah microUSB is Filmsy....aka Sucks!!

    • @DEBOASSE
      @DEBOASSE Před 5 lety

      True Pi is only 35 bucks yo

    • @hanro50
      @hanro50 Před 3 lety +1

      1 it's silent
      2 it's arm, which kicks x86 to the curve in terms of power efficiency.
      3 they're Linux capable machines...
      (Meaning they shipped with a large software catalogue out of the box on day 1)