>Putting these tools front and centre is designed to inspire tinkering.
I just got my first pi a few days ago -- I have had so much fun with it already. I'm working on a list of a variety of things I can do with it, as it has really sparked my creativity. I'll probably end up ordering several more for various tinkering.
The possibilities are endless as to what these cheap but powerful devices will allow the creative minds to come up with; very exciting!
I have encountered huge bugs with USB in the Pi for things as diverse as wifi streaming, network HDD sharing, bluetooth, webcam snapshots, and microphone access. I keep reading these rave reviews about the Pi and wondering: is it just me or is this thing practically worthless for anything outside of AV playback (for which it admittedly works well, at least for hardware-accelerated codecs)? What are you doing with your Pi that makes you so happy?
I'm getting one for a monitoring dashboard. It's unfortunate that it doesn't have a VGA or DVI port (for me preferably VGA) and only has video output over HDMI. It would seem that if you were creating a cheap computer to be used to tinker and learn it would support video output that would be used to connect it to inexpensive computer monitors.
HDMI and DVI-D are essentially the same minus audio, so assuming your monitor supports DVI-D and not just DVI-A, you can buy an HDMI->DVI cable from monoprice for less than 5 bucks.
Converting to VGA is pricier because of the D->A conversion required.
Most (all?) TVs being sold today support HDMI, so I think the thought is that children don't have to buy a monitor too and can just plug these into their parents TV.
The popular pi distros usually support SSH by default.
Another solution would be software that finds the pi on your network. You could just use an ip scanner, but a specialized one could filter out any other devices that happen to be running an ssh server or listening on an ssh port.
HDMI connector is also a darn sight smaller, which is good for limited board space, and probably cheaper than a D-SUB connector as well. (Remember, they were pretty tightly squeezed on budget)
Maybe it's just me but it seems to me that it would be more likely that someone would get their hands on an inexpensive used monitor to tinker with instead of using the family TV. An inexpensive monitor would also allow you to set up basically anywhere in the house.
I know when I was growing up I would not have been able to tinker using the TV for very long before someone else in the family would want to use the TV.
I know a guy in the industry, the Pi has been the object of very lengthy discussions about its connectors already, I don't think they forgot the VGA port.
I just got my first pi a few days ago -- I have had so much fun with it already. I'm working on a list of a variety of things I can do with it, as it has really sparked my creativity. I'll probably end up ordering several more for various tinkering.
The possibilities are endless as to what these cheap but powerful devices will allow the creative minds to come up with; very exciting!