Periphals will depend on the OS. You'll have a lot more support from Linux OS. It's a full functioning USB Port as far as I'm aware as several videos have random stuff plugged in though a splitter.
Actually that might be why it says that as the old prototype version didn't have micro USB port.
So if you have a usb keyboard plugged in one end, and a hdmi tv plugged in the other end, what's powering the Cotton-Candy?
Graphics is provided by a Quad Core ARM Mali-400MP GPU, with 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth, HDMI, microUSB, and USB 2.0 for power or storage
It has micro USB port as well as the big USB.
Looks like a nice little gadget, though it does seem a little pointless if you already have a half-decent android phone capable of doing pretty much what it does via mhl anyway... I couldn't justify the 175 plus cost of microsd card when a 5-10 quid cable does the same job.
The PI can't do much though, it's under powered and can never handle drm stuff, Netflix or a host of over stuff.
Glaucus said:Great so your going to plug your phone into a tv all the time and be unable to use it as a phone while it's plugged in, I cant see many people doing this at all.
or if using as a mobile of with all your stuff on, your willing to lose phone functionality for hours at a time?
If people get Android running on the Pi why wouldn't it do google rented DRM stuff or Netflix? The cotton candy seems overpriced for what it does IMO.
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ARM TrustZone® technology is a system-wide approach to security on high performance computing platforms for a huge array of applications including secure payment, digital rights management (DRM), enterprise and web-based services.
TrustZone technology is tightly integrated into*Cortex™-A processors and extends throughout the system via the*AMBA® AXI™ bus and specific TrustZone*System IP blocks. This system approach means that it is possible to secure peripherals such as secure memory, crypto blocks, keyboard and screen to ensure they can be protected from software attack.
Devices that utilize TrustZone technology, and which are developed according to the recommendations of the TrustZone Ready Program, deliver a platform that is capable of supporting a full Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) and security aware applications and secure services.
The PI can't do much though, it's under powered and can never handle drm stuff, Netflix or a host of over stuff.
The Raspberry Pi is set to redefine the small av media computer market. Bye-bye AppleTV. If you already own one, it certainly doesn't become obsolete overnight, but sales are likely to decline heavily once the Raspberry Pi makes inroads. The variety of x86 stuff out there all has its place. When it comes to the Cotton Candy - a new entrant into the marketplace - it is not very attractive economically or feature-wise. As a home HTPC it offers nothing that your average homebrew x86 can't do and also does not boast stuff like VDPAU post-processing. Neither is it affordable enough that buying it makes any sense in terms of reduced electricity bills. As a mobile HTPC, it is more compelling, but to be honest, I doubt theres a whole lot of people out there who would shell out £150+ instead of using a phone for the same job....
You're also basically saying al tiny htpcs are also useless like appleTV and host of x86 micro machines.
Drm is not dying all legal services use it. It's not going to kill appletv, where are people going to get there media from. All apple movies/tv etc has drm on it, same with Zune, same with Google streaming. So it's not a niche market at all.
The vast array of plugins for XBMC says otherwise.As I've said before if all you want is to play ripped files then it's great. If you want to do anything more it's not very good at all.
Those videos were trial demos. Once the compiled codebase is fully optimised for the ARMv6 and XBMC is tuned for the Raspberry Pi, navigation will likely be noticeably quicker. It is early days. Your average-joe using openelec won't be using the device for web browsing anyway.It's not going to redefine the HTPC market, it's to limited, have you seen the videos of it runninng Xbmc, plays films fine, but web browsing, that would annoy me.
Devices like the digibee don't have powerful h.264 and powerful OpenGL ES capabilities. The foundation made a point of touting the GPU's grunt: It is aimed at a broad spectrum of applications, that much is blatantly apparent.People are vastly overestimating what it can do. What it should turn on its head is the cheap programable computer systems. Which it can compete with things like digibee. Oh that's exactly what it was designed for.
Take one old PC, install a GT210 and a quiet heatsink. Save £100. Install the OS of your choice... Apart from Android, but really, why would one put Android on an HTPC by choice?Its a he'll of a lot cheaper than a usual x86 HTPC, it also does all the important functions of a HTPC and more as it runs a mobile OS (all though w8 will change that). It also has far more features than just electrical cost. Size, noise from fans etc.
The good thing is all these types of devices are going to fall in price fairly quickly, as they don't need the upto date SOCs.