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Science

Raspberry Pi Zero $5 computer unveiled

Buying the cheapest computer in the world is now cheaper than buying your lunch.

Free computers will also come with MagPi magazine

The Raspberry Pi Zero is smaller than a credit card and went on sale for $5 US ($6.65 Cdn) on Wednesday. (Raspberry Pi Foundation)

Buying the cheapest computer in the world is now cheaper than buying your lunch.

The Raspberry Pi Zero is on sale for $5 US ($6.65 Cdn) from the U.K.-based Raspberry Pi Foundation. The educational charity's goal isto get children more interested in programming by giving them a cheap, simple computer so they can experiment.

"We really don't think we'll get any cheaper than this. We've gone from say, four lattes, to one latte. We're not going to go below the cost of one latte," said Eben Upton, founder of Rapsberry Pi in a video posted on Vimeo. "We really hope that's going to get the last few people in the door and involved in computer programming."

The Raspberry Pi Zero has a1GHz ARM11processor core that is 40 per cent faster than the one on the original Raspberry Pi and 512 megabytes of RAM. Itruns Raspbian, a free operating system based on Linux and optimized for Raspberry Pi computers.

While the tiny computer, smaller than a credit card,has a variety of ports for plugging in crucial accessories like a screen, a mouseand a keyboard, it doesn't come with any of those items or the cables to plug them in. That means you wouldneed to spend a little more than $5 to use it.

So far, Raspberry Pi Zerois available from a handful ofU.K. and U.S.-based retailers.

The foundation says it has produced a few tens of thousands, with some comingfree with its magazine, MagPi, which is available on newsstands in the U.K.

The foundation launched the first version of the Raspberry Pi in 2012 for $35 USand it sold out within weeks.Cheaper versions later became available for as little as $20.

The foundation'snewer version that canrun Windows 10 launched in February for $35.