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Hardware
Sergio Oller edited this page Oct 22, 2017
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Picroft requires minimal hardware. Specifically:
Required:
- Raspberry Pi 3 B(it will start on a Pi 2, but that hardware can't quite keep up over time)
- Any analog speaker
- USB microphone (see below)
- 4GB microSD (8GB highly recommended)
- Power Supply for the Raspberry Pi (we suggest following the Pi foundation's recommendation. This really just means a 2.5A micro usb power supply.)
Optional:
- USB Keyboard
- HDMI monitor/TV
Here is specific hardware that has been tested with Picroft. If you try other hardware, please edit this page and add your findings! Make sure to either include set-up steps required or say whether or not it's plug-and-play (PAP).
- Blue Snowball/Snowball Ice - Works very well
-
CM108 Based Mics - The CM108 chip drives many low-priced microphones in various form-factors (if you run 'lsusb' you'll see them as C-Media Electronics, Inc. CM108 Audio Controller. All work, but some are better than others for Picroft purposes.
- eBerry Plug and Play Home Studio - decent experience, fair range
- Kinobo Makio - functional, but only works at close range
- Jabra Speak410 USB Speakerphone - Mic and speaker in the same device. Microphone range is good and speaker sound is loud and crisp.
- mVox USB Speakerphone - Mic and speaker in the same device. Microphone range is poor and speaker sound is bad compare to Jabra Speak410.
- PS3 Eye Camera - Affordable and mic range is good.
- None at this point
- Logitech Z50 - Mono speaker, wired, simple, can be found for cheap.