this post was submitted on 26 Mar 2025
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I was under the assumption that Raspberry Pi was a US based company, but I just found out they are European and almost all made in Wales.

Itโ€™s probably the most European computer you can buy, with a massive following of enthusiastic developers creating alternatives for all the cloud services we are trying to stop using.

This has confirmed my choice to try and replace the US based cloud services my family and I are currently using.

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[โ€“] TheMightyCat@lemm.ee 8 points 1 week ago (9 children)

Does anyone know of a European alternative for a x86 single board pc? I like the pi but it being ARM is a deal breaker for me.

Currently i use Lattepanda and they are great, so if something like that exists but European i would be very thankful.

[โ€“] 9point6@lemmy.world 9 points 1 week ago (7 children)

x86 is only licensed to be made by Intel, AMD and whoever owns the Cyrix and VIA licenses these days. Intel has not issued new licenses since the 90s and doesn't intend to ever again.

Due to this, there is basically no chance there will ever be an x86 CPU manufactured in the EU, I'm afraid.

If you accept the CPU won't be European though, I'm fairly sure there are a decent number of European industrial PC manufacturers to choose from, which are half the time basically SBCs with a heatsink attached.

I'm curious what you're doing on an SBC that explicitly requires x86, though? I can't really think of anything you'd use an SBC for that wouldn't be workable on ARM unless you need some specific piece of compute-intensive (and therefore not practical to run via QEMU or something), proprietary softwareโ€”perhaps full fat virtualization of something maybe preventing a docker-like alternative?

I'm curious what you're doing on an SBC that explicitly requires x86, though?

Not parent, but I used ARM SBCs for a bit, and while it was nice, my x86 experience with a nuc has been much, much better. HW acceleration works on some RPIs, and sort of worked on my Orange Pi 5+, but only when using an ancient kernel which had some hacks (like, kernel debug messages saying "DISABLE THIS FOR RELEASE!"). And afaik RPI 5 doesn't support hw encoding (not to mention no SSD support).

Basically, my experience was that the hardware was neat if sometimes limited, the energy consumption was great, but the software/kernel support...ugh. YMMV of course.

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