Source: The Register
The Raspberry Pi Foundation’s decision to price its entry-level Pi 4 at $400—nearly 8x the original $35 launch price—ends the single-board computer’s role as an accessible learning platform and moves it firmly into professional/industrial territory. DRAM cost inflation is the stated reason, but the real story is that component scarcity and supply chain consolidation have made ultra-cheap hardware economically unviable; the Foundation is choosing margin over market democratization. This creates an opening for competitors (Arduino, Orange Pi, others) to reclaim the education and hobbyist segments that made Raspberry Pi culturally dominant, changing who builds the next generation of hardware engineers.