Why Raspberry Pi for an SBC guy

ArmSoM Sige7 purple enclosure

If anyone asks why I prefer to work with Raspberry Pis when I want to tinker on a random project, consider:

I just spent the past hour with a brand new ArmSoM Sige7 board (see my debugging notes in my sbc-reviews repo). This SBC has been on the market for months, with glowing reviews all the way back in May...

It took about 30 minutes before I could get it to boot (20 minutes to find an image that would flash and at least start booting). Then 20 to try getting boot to go all the way through and get logged in. And the last 10 trying to set up an account on ArmSoM's forum to ask what the default user/pass for Ubuntu is (since all the other defaults I could scrounge up in their docs and forum posts didn't work).

It was especially fun having to dig through their official Google Drive folder of OS images, last updated in July, to find one that would both flash to a microSD card with Etcher, and boot the device. (/s)

This is not an isolated incident. So many times I hop on a new SBC board train, and end up spending more time just getting to the point I can start doing a project... than actually doing a project 🤦‍♂️

The hardware looks cool, though. Hopefully I can get logged in next week!

Comments

And before you ask; the title's a silly play on my username from GitHub / elsewhere ('geerlingguy').

Had a similar experiance a few years back during the pi shortage, wanted a low power device for some docker containers and an SMB share. Thought I'd leave the Pi's for beginners.
Unstable power delivery killed off the storage, and random crashes with no reboots or logs made the containers useless.
We live, we learn!

Totally agree, there are plenty awesome looking SBCs on the paper, but then when it comes to usability and productivity they turn to be nightmare.

Having dealt with the Milk V Duo S the last few months, I can confirm that non pi SBCs are still abysmal software wise (and MilkV's team is actually *extremely* active in terms of development). The Pi Team is safe as long as that stays true regardless of how wacky and wild other boards get with their hardware.

I have a similar experience with Orange Pi 5 Pro. Spent 45 minutes looking through traces of OS that works well just to arrive at Armbian. Also it just shuts off when overheating so that's rough.

This seems like a decent spot to ask since it's on the topic of Pi's vs other SBCs, do you have any major thoughts on the Libre Computer Le Potato? I've checked your repo and it's not mentioned there, but I know you used a bunch of them for that MrBeast project a while back.
I'm looking for something to tinker with but my budget is limited so the price of the Potato and their bundles have caught my eye, but there's not a huge wealth of coverage for these online.

I do have an issue for it on sbc-reviews, but I don't know if I ever finished the full testing. It should certainly be in the README though, oops! Can you comment on that issue and bump it so I remember to add it in?