Last Friday, an article in Eurogamer about the Raspberry Pi's pending
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document.write(lex release threw a wrench in the mental gears of anyone hoping to soon order one of the long-awaited (and much anticipated) boards, which had been bent upon to be ready for orders old this month. The piece was based on an audience with David Braben — since picked up, and anon corrected, by others as well — and it gave the imposing both that a sudden delay had cropped up in the program (so that the boards wouldn't be up for grabs for consumers until September), and that the price might rise as well. The Raspberry Pi site says that both of these were mistaken, and clarifies (with some bold print, even): "You will be able to buy a Raspberry Pi from the end of February, from this website. The 'consumer release' that Eurogamer is talking about is veritably the scholastic release, which, as you’ll be aware if you’ve been hanging out on our forums, will come with a kid-targetted os/2 stack, a heap of written support materials, and a touchstone case." That informative version sounds like it's got enough value added to justify a higher price and a longer wait, but you can unwrench those gears if you're just lured in the plain (unboxed) board instead.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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