SD / MMC / SDIO card slot (3.3 V with card power only)ġ0/100 Mbit/s Ethernet (8P8C) USB adapter on the third/fifth port of the USB hub (SMSC lan9514-jzx)Ĩ× GPIO plus the following, which can also be used as GPIO: UART, I☬ bus, SPI bus with two chip selects, I²S audio +3.3 V, +5 V, groundġ7× GPIO plus the same specific functions, and HAT ID busĨ× GPIO plus the following, which can also be used as GPIO: UART, I☬ bus, SPI bus with two chip selects, I²S audio +3.3 V, +5 V, ground.Īn additional 4× GPIO are available on the P5 pad if the user is willing to make solder connectionsĨ5.60 mm × 56.5 mm – not including protruding connectorsĦ5 mm × 56.5 mm – (same as HAT board) and 10 mm highĨ5.60 mm × 56. HDMI (rev 1.3 & 1.4), 14 HDMI resolutions from 640×350 to 1920×1200 plus various PAL and NTSC standards, composite video (PAL and NTSC) via RCA jackĪnalog via 3.5 mm phone jack digital via HDMI and, as of revision 2 boards, I²S HDMI (rev 1.3 & 1.4), 14 HDMI resolutions from 640×350 to 1920×1200 plus various PAL and NTSC standards, composite video (PAL and NTSC) via 3.5 mm TRRS jack shared with audio out HDMI (rev 1.3 & 1.4), 14 HDMI resolutions from 640×350 to 1920×1200 plus various PAL and NTSC standards, composite video (PAL and NTSC) via RCA jack MPEG-2 and VC-1 (with license), 1080p30 H.264/MPEG-4 AVC high-profile decoder and encoderĥ12 MB (shared with GPU) as of 15 October 2012ġ5-pin MIPI camera interface (CSI) connector, used with the Raspberry Pi camera or Raspberry Pi NoIR camera This means theyre better suited to drawing video or 3d scenes, where its usually possible to divide the picture up into pieces that can be processed in parallel. Issue 22 new Yvette Taylor repo owner created an issue. New video features! MPEG-2 and VC-1 decode, H.264 encode, CEC support –
Our bad.Īt GBP2.4 (only USD3.8, or HKD30), now our beloved RaspberryPi can enjoy full hardware decode with MPEG2 support, which is very important for my usage in DVB TV solutions! Our initial expectation was that most of you would buy the Raspberry Pi for educational purposes, and that you wouldn’t mind that MPEG-2 wasn’t available. Providing that licence would have raised the price of every Raspberry Pi by roughly 10%, and we simply weren’t able to justify that when we held it up against the educational goals of the Foundation. One of the things that we had to regretfully dismiss as an option was an MPEG-2 decode licence for every unit. If you’ve been following this website since we launched it last summer, you’ll probably be aware that we had to make some hard decisions about exactly what we could include on the Raspberry Pi if we were to meet our extremely low target price.