/* jquery */ /* jquery accordion style*/ /* jquery init */

Raspberry Pi Potpourri: February

Struggling to keep up to date with the fast moving Raspberry Pi world?

Then why not buy the Micro Mart magazine this week and read the February issue of my monthly series covering Raspberry Pi news, community events, hardware, software, games and tips.

Here are a few extracts:

The Sony manufacturing facility at Pencoed in Wales is an impressive place, with an output of 4,000 Raspberry Pi Model B boards per day.
The Model B has well over one hundred surface mounted components (SMT) located on both sides of the circuit board, plus a few PCB Through Hole (PTH) mounted components on the top side.
To ease handling issues they travel down the production line as a connected 'Pi six-pack'.

Raspberry Pi Jam, or Jamboree, events are springing up all around the country. A quick browse of the Raspberry Jam website reveals events in London, Manchester, Cambridge, Bristol, Coventry, Milton Keynes, Durham, Machynlleth and even Tokyo.

Chameleon is a Raspbian remix image (without the X graphical environment) which uses its own launcher to run emulators for old computers, arcades and consoles.
The supported list includes the ZX81, Amstrad, Atari ST, C128, Vic-20 and Oric Atmos.

Visit my Raspberry Pi page for news, reviews, advice and tutorials.

Inside Steve's Brain by Leander Kahney

The appeal of this multi-faceted book extends to marketing folks, product designers, budding entrepreneurs and anyone curious about how Apple came to be the most valued company in the world.

It works as a narrative on Apple's history, with an extended timeline compared with rival books, and includes a detailed look at the formation of Pixar and it's day-to-day activities. Historical information is blended with analysis of the single-minded focus, marketing methods, design practices and perfectionist approach that made Apple the company it is today.

Threaded throughout are tales of the man himself and how he shaped the company right from the very beginning. While it certainly isn't intended to be chronological biographical study of Jobs, it is nevertheless full of interesting facts and anecdotes.

His religious devotion to perfection is evident in every chapter. Examples include boxing of the original Macintosh in 1984, meticulous attention to screw heads, precise lighting arrangements for Apple's onstage announcements and the internal layout of the high-street stores.

Of course, Jobs needed a world-class team of people around him to achieve such great things. Each individual was invariably handpicked, lured by Jobs's vision and cajoled by his undoubted charm. Yet they needed to share his passion, adjust to his individualistic work practices, weather his fierce outbursts, cope with his often overbearing attention to detail, and handle the relentless pressure to deliver nothing less than perfection.

The book's smooth narrative style and flow makes for an enjoyable read. Nevertheless, I'd like to have seen more insights from Jobs himself. The majority of the views expressed come from employees and associates, which aren't the same as listening in on his own thoughts. In addition, the reverence given to Jobs and his methods means we miss out on a more balanced view of what it was really like to work for one of the most influential characters of the computing age.

Read more Apple analysis posts.