

Featuring a quad-core 64-bit processor, wireless networking, dual-display output and 4K video playback, Raspberry Pi 400 is a complete personal computer, built into a compact keyboard. Inside is a modified Pi4-4GB mated to a huge heat sink for excellent passive cooling! All I/O connectors are along the back of the keyboard, including GPIO.
The Raspberry Pi 400 is ideal for surfing the web, creating and editing documents, watching videos, and learning to program using the Raspberry Pi OS desktop environment. It's also an outstanding value as it includes the Pi4 and keyboard that also functions as a case.
Specification
Processor | Broadcom BCM2711 quad-core Cortex-A72 (ARM v8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.8GHz |
RAM | 4GB LPDDR4-3200 |
Connectivity | Dual-band (2.4GHz and 5.0GHz) IEEE 802.11b/g/n/ac wireless LAN, Bluetooth 5.0, BLE Gigabit Ethernet 2 × USB 3.0 and 1 × USB 2.0 ports |
GPIO | Horizontal 40-pin GPIO header |
Video & sound | 2 × micro HDMI ports (supports up to 4Kp60) |
Multimedia | H.265 (4Kp60 decode); H.264 (1080p60 decode, 1080p30 encode); OpenGL ES 3.0 graphics |
SD card support | MicroSD card slot for operating system and data storage |
Keyboard | 78 key compact keyboard, US Keyboard Layout |
Power | 5V DC via USB connector |
Operating temperature | 0°C to +50°C |
Dimensions | 286 mm × 122 mm × 23 mm (maximum) |
1 Review Hide Reviews Show Reviews
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Squared away Turnkey Linux PC... w/ GPIO!
PiShop was the ONLY vendor who had these in stock, and they wisely rationed them in order to defeat the Ebay scalpers--Kudos! Shipping was very prompt, so another thumbs-up there. Easily burned a RPiOS (64-bit Debian) image on my old Win-D-Bloze 7 brick, and this little beauty booted right up, figured out the display, and walked me through WiFi setup and other config items--VERY "turn-key" compared to my Pi 3B in 2017. Only thing missing is a pointing device, but it instantly recognized a std. mouse on USB 2.0 port. In the future I may just slip a Pimoroni Trackball Breakout onto pins 1-3-5-7-9 and then... "emulate" or "pipe" the I2C data to the USB mouse handler?... cross that bridge when... ;')