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Reddit mentions of Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard

Sentiment score: 14
Reddit mentions: 25

We found 25 Reddit mentions of Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard. Here are the top ones.

Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
or
1.4GHz 64-bit quad-core ARMv8 CPU, 1 GB RAM802.11n Wireless LAN, 10/100Mbps Lan SpeedBluetooth 4.2, Bluetooth Low Energy4 USB ports, 40 GPIO pins, Full HDMI port, Combined 3.5mm audio jack and composite videoCamera interface (CSI),Display interface (DSI), Micro SD card slot (now push-pull rather than push-push), VideoCore IV 3D graphics core
Specs:
Height0.787401574 Inches
Length3.543307083 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateFebruary 2018
Weight0.00220462262 Pounds
Width2.362204722 Inches

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Found 25 comments on Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard:

u/ajones_53 · 452 pointsr/raspberry_pi

Very brief build guide:

Mirror: ~110$ after shipping -Two Way Glass Mirror - 12" x 24" - Mirropane - 1/4" Thickness - Flat Edge Polished - for Smart Mirrors, Hidden Televisions, Security and Surveillance Applications https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MSAZ3PN/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_UAdiDbB7HTW20
Rpi 3: ~40$ - Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BDR5PDW?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Monitor: ~ 70$ - Sceptre E205W-1600 20" 75Hz Ultra Thin LED Monitor HDMI VGA Build-in Speakers, Metallic Black (2018 version) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00S8W8QMG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_.CdiDb9X0FX93
Assorted cables: ~10$
I spent about 20$ on wood for the frame.
I got the code from here: https://github.com/HackerShackOfficial/Smart-Mirror

Total: ~250$

Rough build guide:
Pull the code onto the pi with git.
Follow the instructions in the README to get everything working.
Disassemble the monitor. Be mindful of ESD and don't destroy the display panel. Set aside all the electronics; you'll need them, duh. Once it is free test it. BE SURE to test the panel at most steps to make sure it's not dead or damaged.
Make the frame to the spec of the mirror. Add in support to make sure the panel will lie where you want it to in the mirror.
Do a dry fit to place and route all the electronics.
I used hot glue and masking tape to secure everything down and block out light leak.
Lastly, go into a dark room and test it out. It'll show you where most of your light leak is.

I hope this is helpful for everyone. Sorry if it isn't comprehensive enough. Also, two things not included in the price were my priceless pals that helped with the assembly. Big thanks to LDC and Big Jo.

u/Onlythefinestwilldo · 16 pointsr/homelab

Now that you mention it, I'd be curious too. I'll tally it up and get back to you all.

Edit: here it is!


Thing |Price | Quantity
---|---|----
Belkin Power Strip | 30 | 1
Raspberry Pi 3 B+ | 38.30 | 2
Miuzei Raspberry Pi Cooling Case Kit | 25.99 | 2
Netgear 8 Port Gigabit Switch | 17.99 | 1
WD 2 TB External Hard Drive | 59.99 | 4
KingDian 8GB SSD | 10 | 1
Mitac PD12TI CC Mini-ITX Motherboard w/ Intel Atom D2500 CPU | 149.99 | 1
Mini-Box picoPSU-80 80w 12v PSU | 28.95 | 1
Sabrent 12v AC power supply | 10.98 | 1


Total: $616.45

I was doing pretty good until I got to the damn WD hard drives. I suspect I paid way too much for how good they are. Probably could have saved some money by making an enclosure and using real hard drives or something

u/AdversarialPossum42 · 7 pointsr/HomeNetworking

I use the free Veeam Agent for Windows as well and it's awesome. Good pick! 👍

You have a few options here. Depends on how adventurous you're willing to get.

  • Share a drive from one of your PCs. You'll need to keep that PC on during the time the other PCs to do their backup so they can access the drive.
  • If your home router has a USB port then it probably supports sharing an external drive on the network. Check the router's manual for how to set this up.
  • Buy a dedicated a NAS (Network Attached Storage) device, like Synology or QNAP.
  • Build your own NAS using Raspberry Pi or ODROID HC2.
u/denzuko · 4 pointsr/raspberry_pi

Sorry but one needs to factor in a few things.. To quote "Raspberry Pi-based console" thus meaning this project is nothing more than slapping together a few parts off adafruit, installing retropi, and 3d printing a custom case. Parts and software alone are under $100, print materials under $10, and time well that's incalculable for a "hand made" product.


To back up my statement; check out a similar project:

https://www.adafruit.com/product/2510 ($47.50 USD)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BDR5PDW ($35 USD)
https://www.adafruit.com/product/2011 ($12.50 USD)

https://retropie.org.uk/download/ (free)
Total: $90 + s&h


And those are Retail prices. Wholesale prices are used to determine market price (e.g. wholesale price totalled per unit * 2, where two is the cost of the one you made and the next one behind it then add ~30% markup to get the manufacturer's suggested price).


Big box consoles can charge less because they shave that ~30% markup to nearly 5-8% markup but overall they'll still working with bulk wholesale parts that are pennies on the dollar.


This pricing either suggests that someone is trying to profit of the open source community or has no understanding of economics and finance.

u/Came_by_to_watch · 4 pointsr/homeassistant

pi ($38/)

pi camera ($24/)

ReSpeaker ($15/)


so $77 per unit/room or 6 rooms for under $500

See second answer here to stream via RSTP to pull in to HA via streams or capturing via zoneminder

u/8Bits1132 · 3 pointsr/RetroPie

The CanaKit ones are usually good as a starting point (unless you don't want to buy the components individually, though as another person said, the power supplies that ship with them aren't the greatest.

If you DO want to buy the components individually, however, you only need to get the board itself, an optional case, and the power supply. Here's what I've seen most people use.

  • Raspberry Pi 3 B+ (around $35 USD. It's the most powerful iteration of the Raspberry Pi. It might fit your needs, as it can play PS1 games pretty well.
  • Official Raspberry Pi Power Supply (5V/2.5A)

    You could also invest in heatsinks or fans if you want to keep the Pi a bit cooler in temperature. Or, you could also buy a Flirc case, which is around $15 USD, which acts as a giant heatsink. It's one of the more popular cases around here, and for good reason. It's very reasonably priced in my opinion, and it does a good job at keeping the Pi nice and cool, so you don't need a fan.

    Speaking of cases, if you want that retro console look, there are some pretty good options, with one of the most well known case makers being Retroflag. They don't come with any form of cooling like heatsinks and fans, so you'll have to provide those separately.

    If you are asking about controllers, you can use both wired USB or wireless Bluetooth controllers as well (though you'll need to have at least a USB controller or a keyboard connected to the Pi for the first part of setting it up which will ask you to configure your controls which work across the RetroPie environment (that includes EmulationStation which is used to launch your games, and RetroArch which powers most of the emulators included with the default RetroPie install).

    You can read the RetroPie documentation for more information on RetroPie itself too.
u/SuperScathe · 3 pointsr/Arcade1Up

It isn't difficult, don't get intimidated. You can do this in an evening without any experience. You'll need a Pi, a Pi case, a Pi power adapter, a microSD card, a monitor encoder (if you tell me which model monitor you have, I'll send you a link for the encoder for it (NOT WHICH GAME YOU HAVE -- the model numbers vary even for the same titles -- just take the back panel off and read me the model number, it's in bold white text on a sticker on the back of the monitor)), some USB encoders to plug your buttons and joysticks into the Pi (grab two of these), and two buttons to use for coin/select (you will have to do some very minor drilling into that little black diagonal panel between the kick panel and the control panel to mount these; don't be scared though, even if you mess it up, you can get a piece of 1/8" MDF and paint it black for under $5 to replace it).

For instructions on installing, see here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09DQCOr6zQM - just ignore the products he tells you to use, since you'll be using the stock joysticks and buttons and getting just the encoders. The installation for everything else is the same.

u/Efriim · 2 pointsr/RetroPie

I haven't used any handheld pi. I guess there are some good alternatives though.

​

​

NDS with charger. $25 - $40 (I would get the DSi) (DSlite bumpers and things tend to wearout)

A flash cart for NDS. $15 - $20 (DSTT I hear is best) (Acekard2i is great) (R4 is hard to tell the model) (DSTWO flashcart drains battery life, is overpriced, but has built in cpu and emulators for gba snes and genesis) All are compatible with 3ds, NDS, DSi.

MicroSD. $10. Samsung EVO 32gb on amazon is a good deal

The DS has a lot of great games, snes and genesis emulators work okay but not the best. GBA emulation only works with dstwo or ez-flash.

Total $50 - $70.

​

​

PSVITA w/ charger $110 - $150. Never used one, cfw is available for firmware up to 3.68. The firmware 3.69 is not hackable.

Vita Memory Card + microsd $20. Since the proprietary memory card are so expensive.

PSVITA & TV are cfw compatible up to 3.67 - 3.68, however there may be some homebrew incompatibility on these firmwares. 3.69 is not compatible yet. CFW can load PSP homebrew as well as play PS1.

Total $130 - $170

​

​

Wii U complete console $140. Used - Very good

SD card. $15 Sandisk 64gb Extreme SDXC

DS Virtual Console Game $10 From E-shop, needed to play DS on Console/Gamepad screens.

Emulates Nintendo up to DS, has an abandoned PSX emulator from the wii. Portable and Console for TV.

Total $165

​

The consoles and handhelds fluctuate in price. PSvita TV was low as $40 at one time, they are a bit inflated right now but collectors items will hold value. Finding one second hand or used for half-price is probable a used PSP is easy to find for $40 but not online.

​

​

RPI $25 - $40 RPI3b+ is what I have connected to my TV. The RPI2 is similar to RPI0 and emulates PSX but not all, as per the RPI3B+. There are many SBCs, I think the OdroidC2 and Tinkerboard and NanoPI M4 are all interesting but I have not used them.

Case + Heatsink and fan $25 - $30 There are other cases Argon One, SuperPI Retroflag, many others, some bundles heatsink and fan are necessary for the rpi3b+. The retroflag controllers are not preferred.

Power Supply $15 or official raspberry pi power supply.

MicroSD $10

Controllers $15 - $35 There are a lot of options here, recycle your PS3 or XBOX360 controller, Buy a corded Ibuffalo Snes, 8bitdo SF30, logitech, retro-bit/retrolink n64. I think only the RPI3B+ and RPI Zero W have bluetooth, else an adapter is needed.

Total $75 - $130

​

&&&

​

$50 (zero W + microsd + psu) + all the parts for building a gameboy zero

battery ~15

powerblock ~20

usb teensy ~15

controllermodule ~10

lcd and shield ~30

case ~20?

main buttons ~10?

audio amp and speaker ~10?

extra buttons and switches, wheels ~15?

Total ~$195

u/jacksonobrian · 2 pointsr/Amd

Youre not wrong. It seems maybe influenced, i have 3 LGA1151 purchases in the past. Mine has:
GIGABYTE Z390 AORUS PRO WiFi (Intel LGA1151/Z390/ATX/2xM.2 Thermal Guard/Onboard AC Wi-Fi/RGB Fusion/Motherboard) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HRZKPXM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_l77TCbRQT2SMW

Asus ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming Motherboard LGA1151 (Intel 8th 9th Gen) ATX DDR4 DP HDMI M.2 USB 3.1 Gen2 802.11AC Wi-Fi https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HCPLQ2H/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_t97TCbVKETH3F

Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BDR5PDW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_Y97TCb5371QPE

MSI Performance Gaming AMD X470 Ryzen 2 AM4 DDR4 Onboard Graphics CFX ATX Motherboard (X470 Gaming Plus) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CF31C1Q/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_l-7TCbTBE119E

u/do_you_realise · 2 pointsr/GiftIdeas

I just read this post after answering another question and it might be that the suggestions there could come in handy for your husband too, so pasting it in here: https://www.reddit.com/r/GiftIdeas/comments/a1g9wm/gift_idea_for_someone_who_likes_jailbreaking/eapp5n6/

Although if you have a bit more to spend you can get a faster version of the Raspberry Pi (e.g. Model 3 B+) than the one I linked above. And maybe splash out on one of the bundles which includes a case, power adapter, SD card etc.

u/IhatemyISP · 2 pointsr/homebridge

As I'm sure you have now deduced, based on the comments below, the device you have shares its name with the software package this subreddit supports.

You have a couple of options at this point:

  1. Find support for the device you have and continue down the rabbit hole of getting it to work.
  2. Return the device you have, get a Raspberry Pi, install and setup the Homebridge software (find other guides via Google), install the Chamberlain plugin for Homebridge, and get support here.

    I know first time Raspberry Pi owners can feel a bit lost when setting everything up, but it's not as hard as it seems, and you've got everyone here for assistance.

    Either way you go, hopefully you get it working.
u/VRtinker · 2 pointsr/technology

>ZipaMicro, a popular smart home hub developed by Croatian firm Zipato

Popular? Has anyone ever heard of them? For reference: they say they are used in 20K households in 89 countries (that is about 225 households per country). Good luck finding someone using this device even on a forum to ask for help or able to professionally set it up or service it.

When I search on Amazon I see a bunch of over-priced low-power controllers, IP cams and etc. in cheap-looking cases. Literally you can get a Raspberry Pi 3 or 4 with a decent case (or a kit) for a fraction of the price. What's the point of buying this over a Raspberry Pi?

u/polyarc_brendan · 2 pointsr/OculusQuest

The biggest issue I ran into with the RasPi/scrcpy was it chugging on a large video window. I had to lower the screen resolution to 800x600 (that projector can only display 848x480 anyway) and tell scrcpy to go full screen. I could pull a 1024x768 video frame from the quest and it appeared to resize to 800x600 just fine.


Here were the command line args I used:

scrcpy --fullscreen --no-control --bit-rate 2M --crop 1024:768:288:336


Parts List:

u/Tanddant · 2 pointsr/googlehome

Check out home assistant, let's you do awesome stuff, and integrates with 1400+ different smart home things, there also a subreddit for it /r/homeassistant/

All of it can run of of a raspberry pi which can be had for $38 (maybe take a look at the raspberry pi 4, don't know if Home Assitant supports it yet)

It also integrates with google home so and device you can add to home assistant you can use with google home

u/venom8599 · 1 pointr/raspberry_pi

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07BDR5PDW

That's what I got and configured last week. Ethernet port and standard USB and HDMI ports.

As a plus the 3B+ can also boot from USB directly -- so you can use a USB mass storage device instead of MicroSD. Whether this is better or worse for performance and drive longevity I can't really say. For me as a one-off thing it was just more convenient to use a USB drive. Also with the extra power it would be more useful if you had other things you might want to use it for.

u/ZyluphixUK · 1 pointr/PleX

You could get a raspberry pi 3+ and a 1 - 2TB 2.5 inch hard drive with a hard drive dock that powers via USB.

If the devices in the household will direct play the files, then the raspberry pi will simply serve as a basic NAS and the 1-2TB hard drive should spin up powered from the dock.

For instance:

Raspberry Pi 3+: £32.47 / $42.46

Memory Card for RPi3: £5.84 / $7.64

USB Enclosure for HDD: £7.65 / $10.00

2TB Toshiba 2.5" Drive: £48.19 / $63.03

​

You'd be looking at £94.15 / $123.11 (i know it will cost different in USA but simply using exchange rate conversion).

​

It would also take up less space than a single DVD and would possibly hold 71 REMUX 1080p movies. However, you could go for lower quality "1080p" versions and get alot more on there.

​

I have some spare RPi3's and the above to test this on your behalf :)

​

Edit: However if you arnt too bothered about size, then buying a second hand PC would be significantly better but the above purely factors in the smallest possible form factor!

u/szoguner · 1 pointr/raspberry_pi

Sorry, but i didn't mention im in Germany. Yeah im sure it's the correct one. I also printed the case for it (at least for a B+ model). Also, got an update from amazon. It will be delivered 16-19th march :)
I also printed out the case shown here: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:624084
I have no problems printing a different one, or cut a piece out if it won't fit. Its 2-3h of printing i don't even have to watch over.

https://www.amazon.de/Raspberry-Pi-3-Modell-B/dp/B07BDR5PDW/ref=dp_ob_title_ce

u/lutusp · 1 pointr/linuxquestions

> ... she became suspicious and thought I was cheating on her.

Well, if that's an issue, then the existence of an encrypted directory or partition will likely cause even more suspicion.

> Maybe if I had a "family" computer that ran the media center ...

Wait ... surely you know that a Raspberry Pi 3 is more than adequate to run Kodi or a similar media presentation app?

Raspberry Pi 3 b+, just the board, no case ... $40.

A plastic case, fan, power supply and other stuff ... $17.

(I'm not advocating that you shop at Amazon, just some pretty pictures to show. Everyone has Raspberry Pis for sale ... shop around.)

A computer like this would replace any computer you're misapplying as a media server at the moment, and it has an HMDI plug that (unlike many such things) actually works, delivering 1920x1080 picture and sound.

For me this whole Raspberry Pi thing is completely astonishing. My first computer was an Apple II and it did almost nothing, slowly. A modern pencil sharpener has more raw processing power than my first computer. It was $1600 in 1977 dollars, much more in modern currency. And a computer like the Pi for $40 ... I'm astonished.

EDIT: additions

u/UnhappySquirrel · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Raspberry Pi is a small computer on a single board. It’s small and therefore useful for creating monitoring systems, etc.

Element14 Raspberry Pi 3 B+ Motherboard https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BDR5PDW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_4wMzCb4JP39VZ

I’d actually recommend getting one of the kitd though that includes power adaptor, protective case, etc. It’s very easy to put together.

Tilt then has an image which you can download and burn to a SanDisk memory card. Plug that into the SD card slot in the Pi, power it on, and you’re ready to go.

The Pi acts like a little web server which you can access with your browser. A dashboard will load up, and any nearby Tilt Hydrometers will be listed.

You can also set it up to sync readings with sites like brewersfriend.com

u/exophrine · 1 pointr/RetroPie

I never used one before the past few weeks either, and I'm never looking back. The buttons feel great, the Pi responds immediately...my only complaint is that the 1 and 2 shoulder buttons on both sides are a little too close, but that's negligible, you get used to it quick.

Here are my RetroPie details:

u/MrGestore · 1 pointr/italy

collegandomi al post di /u/elphio

raspberry 34€

custodia (un caricatore decente vedi tu se ce l'hai) 6,90€

tastiera wireless 17€

un cavo hdmi ce l'avrai, no? ti rimangono pure 2€ per un paio di caffé

ah già manca la sd, come non detto (ma se hai già tastiera e mouse, ora che leggo meglio il tuo post...)

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Title|Recreating the 40-Yard Dash Speed Test with a Raspberry Pi and Phototransistors
Thumbnail|Link
Views|111
Length|05:31
Likes/Dislikes|8/0
Comments|0
Description|In this video, we show how we created the NFL's 40-yard dash speed test that is used by scouts to evaluate the speed of potential American football prospects. To recreate the test, we used a Raspberry Pi, phototransistors, laser diodes, resistors, a analog-to-digital converter, and a simple Python stopwatch program. Using these materials, we created two laser tripwires separated by 40 yards. One tripwire starts the stopwatch, and the other stops the stopwatch. ⤶⤶For more information on the code and our wiring setup, visit our github repository: https://github.com/chris-gong/forty-yard-dash-rpi⤶⤶Thanks again to our friends for helping us out: Alex, Taylor, Ethan, Zach, and Grant⤶⤶Join our discord: https://discord.gg/2xbR5qT⤶Support us on patreon: https://www.patreon.com/flopperam⤶⤶Social media links:⤶Twitter: https://twitter.com/Flopperam⤶Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/flopperam/⤶Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/flopperam⤶Alex's Twitter: https://twitter.com/uhFakie⤶⤶Materials Used:⤶Raspberry Pi: https://www.amazon.com/ELEMENT-Element14-Raspberry-Pi-Motherboard/dp/B07BDR5PDW/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=raspberry+pi&qid=1565404835&s=gateway&sr=8-4⤶Phototransistors: https://www.amazon.com/HiLetgo-Phototransistor-Photosensitive-Sensitive-Sensors/dp/B00M1PMHO4/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=phototransistor&qid=1565404855&s=gateway&sr=8-2⤶Laser diodes: https://www.amazon.com/HiLetgo-10pcs-650nm-Diode-Laser/dp/B071FT9HSV/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=laser+diode&qid=1565404876&s=gateway&sr=8-3⤶Breadboards: https://www.amazon.com/Breadboards-Solderless-Breadboard-Distribution-Connecting/dp/B07DL13RZH/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=breadboard&qid=1565404905&s=gateway&sr=8-3⤶Battery holders: https://www.amazon.com/LAMPVPATH-Battery-Holder-Bundle-Single/dp/B07BNMKNQX/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=battery+holder&qid=1565405063&s=gateway&sr=8-5⤶Analog-to-Digital converter: https://www.amazon.com/HiLetgo-Converter-Programmable-Amplifier-Development/dp/B01DLHKMO2/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=raspberry+pi+adc&qid=1565405226&s=gateway&sr=8-3⤶Breadboard wires: https://www.amazon.com/EDGELEC-Breadboard-Optional-Assorted-Multicolored/dp/B07GD2BWPY/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=breadboard+wires&qid=1565404930&s=gateway&sr=8-3⤶10k ohm resistors: https://www.amazon.com/Projects-100EP51210K0-10k-Resistors-Pack/dp/B0185FIOTA/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=10k+ohm+resistors&qid=1565404944&s=gateway&sr=8-3⤶⤶Music Creds⤶Song: Royalty Free Music | Victory - Hip Hop Beat | No Copyright Instrumental⤶Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4D-LoMTbvx4⤶Music & Arrangement: Marjan Gjorgjievski⤶Mix & Mastering: Marjan Gjorgjievski⤶⤶Song: Lakey Inspired - Blossom⤶Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7ArnZl_zBU⤶Follow the artist, Lakey Inspired:⤶https://www.facebook.com/LAKEYINSPIRED⤶https://soundcloud.com/lakeyinspired⤶http://instagram.com/lakeyinspired⤶⤶#nfl #40yarddash #raspberrypi

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u/rimpy13 · 1 pointr/homelabsales

Just get a Pi 4 for the same price. The 1GB Pi 4 is $35, as is a brand new Pi 3 B+. Or $37 on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BDR5PDW/