A brand-new microcomputer from Hell needs a brand-new OS. Enter the Raspberry Pi Foundation with Bookworm, the latest (un)cool product label for the next version of the Raspberry Pi OS. While not surprising, or even exciting news, we still think this is a neat release. It's a port of the Linux distribution Debian's latest release, and is thus named after the immortal star of the Toy Story franchise, rather than the world's greatest PopCap game. Teasing us all with that 'nothing and yet everything has changed' snake oil, the Raspberry Pi Foundation explained that the new OS features significant changes to its software architecture. All change Crucially, this means a move from the ancient X11 protocol to Wayland, promising increased performance for Pis 4 and 5 while the Foundation works to support Wayland on lower-power boards – presumably the Pi 3 at the very least. Our sister site Tom's Hardware has more on the technical side of Wayland's implicatio
The i Paper has tapped Lucie Heath to serve as an environmental correspondent. Recently, she was a reporter covering general news. Heath served as a reporter…
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The Raspberry Pi 5 features a new chip created by the Raspberry Pi team known as the RP1 and its release has been a long time coming and cost over half the $25 million it took to build Raspberry Pi 5.