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Raspberry Pi Zero review – specs, speed and where to buy one

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £4
inc VAT

The tiny Raspberry Pi Zero might lack a feature or two, but at just £4 we can forgive it that

When the original Raspberry Pi Model B launched in February 2012, its impact was felt immediately. Demand knocked major vendors’ websites offline, while developers of single-board computers that had previously felt comfortable asking triple figures for their wares found themselves having to compete with a board costing far less.

The surprise launch of the Raspberry Pi Zero in November echoed the excitement surrounding the original, with one major difference: while the original cost around £30, the new Pi Zero is just £4 –  a price that saw the device become the first computer in history to be cover mounted on a magazine.

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Naturally, however, corners have been cut to reach such a price. Is the Pi Zero truly a herald for the next generation of ultra-affordable, ubiquitous computing or, as its critics would have it, simply a promotional stunt?

Raspberry Pi Zero review: Specifications

Without knowing anything else about the Pi Zero, it’s easy to become disillusioned by a glance at the specifications. Compared with the Raspberry Pi 2 Model B, it’s definitely a backwards step. The new Broadcom BCM2836 quad-core processor with its modern ARMv7 instruction set has been replaced by the long-outdated BCM2835 ARMv6 single-core chip of its predecessors, albeit now running at a stock speed of 1GHz, a 300MHz boost over the original’s 700MHz.

The Pi Zero wasn’t built as a rival to the Raspberry Pi 2, though. It’s designed to offer an alternative to the Raspberry Pi Model A+. Here it compares more favourably, thanks to the processor speed tweak and a doubling of the RAM to 512MB – the same as the larger Model B+ – while the lack of network and single USB port are equal.

Areas have still been sliced to reach that £4 price point, even compared with the Model A+. The camera (CSI) and display (DSI) interface ports have gone, as has the analogue audio output. Composite video support is still there, but you’ll need to solder on a header yourself if you want to use it.

Raspberry Pi Zero Review: Layout

The specifications tell one story, but the layout of the board itself tells another. The Raspberry Pi Zero is a major feat of engineering, packing most of the same features of the Model A+ into a footprint barely half the size and a fraction of the weight.

For those looking to use the Pi Zero in a hardware project, these are positives, as is a lower power draw thanks to fewer components. For those new to the Pi ecosystem, the decision to leave the usual 40-pin general purpose input/output (GPIO) header unpopulated will be an annoyance, although it is one readily solved with a soldering iron and a steady hand. More accomplished users, however, may see the ability to connect only the pins they require as an advantage.

The size of the Pi Zero is undeniably eye-catching, but it does come at a cost. Rather than the full-size HDMI port of the rest of the Raspberry Pi family, the Pi Zero has the less common mini variant. Likewise, the USB port of the Model A+ is lost in favour of a micro-USB OTG (on-the-go) port, requiring an adapter to use any full-size USB device.

Raspberry Pi Zero Review: Performance

When you’ve tracked down adapters for the Pi Zero’s mini-HDMI and micro-USB ports, booting the Pi Zero is a familiar experience. With no operating system provided, it’s up to you to supply a microSD card loaded with a compatible OS. Typically, this would be the popular Raspbian Linux distribution. Unfortunately, options such as Windows 10 and Ubuntu are off the table owing to the Pi Zero’s older processor.

For someone used to the Raspberry Pi 2’s quad-core processor, moving to the Pi Zero feels restrictive. The boot time is considerably lengthened and the benchmarks clearly show the lack of power. The cross-platform SysBench suite completed a CPU test in 358.47 seconds, a result that’s significantly slower than the 74.48 seconds of a Raspberry Pi 2.

Switch the comparison to the Model A+ or B+, though, and the Raspberry Pi Zero’s new 1GHz clock-speed becomes apparent: both full-size models completed the same test in a time of 500 seconds, or 140 seconds slower than the Raspberry Pi Zero.

Raspberry Pi Zero Review: How much does it cost and where can I get one?

With the ability to outperform single-board computers five times its price, the Pi Zero certainly looks good, but there’s one fly in the ointment: availability. The Pi Zero’s price has been set by the Foundation at £4, making it an undeniable bargain, even if you need to pick up adapter cables, the GPIO header, microSD card, and a power supply separately.

Sadly, there are plenty of bargain-hunters out there. The minute stock appears at one of the official outlets, it immediately sells out again. Nearly two months since its launch, the Pi Zero is still difficult to pin down.

That leaves room for a black market of sorts. When the device was bundled on the cover of The MagPi, the Foundation’s official magazine, copies appeared on auction sites for anything up to £100.

Even now, some otherwise reputable retailers are marking the device up to ridiculous levels: one is selling the device for £36, albeit with mini-HDMI and micro-USB adapters to the value of £2 included. At £4, the Pi Zero is a bargain. At £36, the Raspberry Pi 2 is a much better choice for anyone not constrained by size limitations.

Raspberry Pi Zero Review: Verdict

It’s easy to concentrate on the negatives of the Pi Zero, and there certainly are more than one. The processor is a step backwards, the loss of camera and display interfaces will hurt many embedded projects, and the need to solder your own GPIO header will make newcomers nervous. Availability, too, is a major hurdle to the Pi Zero’s success, although one the Foundation is working to resolve.

The price, however, is what saves the Raspberry Pi Zero from disappointment. To be able to build a device that can hold its own against the Model A+ and sell it for just £4 is impressive, and it leaves plenty of room in the budget for the adapter cables and extras required to get it running – even a USB Ethernet or Wi-Fi adaptor for projects that need network connectivity. If you see it on sale at £4 anywhere, snap one up. It’s one amazing bargain.

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