Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

An error occurred while submitting your form. Please try again or file a bug report. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Rhys Davies
on 2 November 2020


The Raspberry Pi Foundation has a new product — the Raspberry Pi 400. The flagship Raspberry Pi 4 was released in June 2019. Since, they added an 8GB model, brought out the Compute Module 4, we certified all Raspberry Pis since Raspberry Pi 2 and we worked together to make the full Ubuntu Desktop ‘just work’ on a Raspberry Pi 4. Now, Ubuntu Server and Ubuntu Desktop also work, out of the box, with the all-new Raspberry Pi 400. 

You can get it on its own, the Raspberry Pi 400 keyboard computer itself. Or as a kit including a beginners guide, a Raspberry Pi official power supply and an official mouse (pictured at the end of the article). We are also delighted to say that for a month you can also get an Ubuntu Desktop Groovy Gorilla sticker when you purchase a Raspberry Pi 4 from Pimoroni. The folks at Pimoroni run their Raspberry Pi business on Ubuntu and very kindly agreed to ship some Groovy Gorilla merch with relevant orders.

The latest and greatest

The changes from the Raspberry Pi 4 to the Raspberry Pi 400 are great. It feels like a product born out of the community. Everything new addresses common or long-standing user feedback. You can still use the same Ubuntu Desktop tutorial and Ubuntu Server tutorial to get started but there are some interesting tweaks under the hood.

First and foremost, the clock rate is up to 1.8Ghz from 1.5Ghz that was standard in the Raspberry Pi 4. This doesn’t sound like a large increase but you can feel the difference. Everything is that much smoother, that much more fluid. This is a direct response to a lot of commentary in forums from people commenting on sluggishness.

This is why Dave Jones (@waveform80) can’t have nice things


Conveniently the Raspberry Pi 400 simultaneously solves a common problem with the Raspberry Pi 4 and throws down the gauntlet for the more passionate users. Let us know if you can get it to thermally throttle (with stock clock settings). To address the problem that the Raspberry Pi 4 had with overheating, the Raspberry Pi 400 has a big chunk of metal that works to ‘stiffen’ the keyboard, give it a more satisfying weight and play the part of a big fat heat-sink. We haven’t managed higher than 60 degrees! (yet.)

If you send @waveform80 hardware this is how it gets treated.

Finally, there are a couple of smaller changes too. The Raspberry Pi 400 now has a power button (ish). Using Fn+F10 operates the power button. If you hold it down for 2 seconds while it’s on it acts as the power button, if you hold it down from 10 seconds it forces power off.

And there’s actually no camera or display ribbon connectors. These were the CSI/DSI ports on earlier models that lent mostly to camera module projects. The Raspberry Pi 400 doesn’t have them presumably for form factor reasons but your USB cameras should work just fine.

The Raspberry Pi PC 

Raspberry Pi users have been wanting to use these single-board computers as their main PC for as long as the board has existed. But a full desktop takes a lot of juice and for everyday users, without the technical knowledge, it wasn’t really possible.

Of course, people have made do, the Raspberry Pi has seen incredible success. Raspberry Pis are used for education in schools and universities, they are the most popular single-board computer for tinkering, and have become enterprise products and home hobby projects alike.

Now we see that the Raspberry Pi Foundation didn’t forget. With the Raspberry Pi 4s graphics, RAM and connectivity specs, it’s powerful enough to work comfortably as a Linux workstation. And with the Ubuntu Desktop support, users have a way to turn their Raspberry Pi into their main PC. It’s almost indistinguishable from a Dell, HP or Lenovo lower end workstation. Almost. 

The biggest difference is the hardware experience. Take one look at the ‘What you’ll need’ section of any Raspberry Pi tutorial and you’ll see a long list. Then, once you have everything, you set it up, it looks, unorganised. Don’t mistake me, it looks great, there’s something satisfying about assembling it all and seeing the fruits strewn over the desk. But even with wireless components, it can look unorganised.   

Enter the Raspberry Pi 400

An improvement on the Raspberry Pi 4 as described earlier but it also takes two cables off the desk. You don’t need to plug in a keyboard and you have the ability to power on and connect through ethernet. You can follow any of the existing desktop or server tutorials to get started. And when you’re done you’ll have the closest thing so far to a Raspberry Pi laptop. This is definitely a milestone on the path to Raspberry Pi PCs. What do you think is next?


Related posts


Hugo Huang
10 November 2025

Canonical announces optimized Ubuntu images for Google Cloud’s Axion N4A Virtual Machines

Canonical announcements Public Cloud

Today Canonical, the publishers of Ubuntu, and Google Cloud announced the immediate availability of optimized Ubuntu images for the new Axion-based N4A virtual machines (VMs) on Google Compute Engine. ...


Canonical
9 October 2025

Canonical releases Ubuntu 25.10 Questing Quokka

Canonical announcements Article

The latest interim release of Ubuntu comes with compatibility enhancements at the silicon level, accessibility upgrades and a robust security posture that sets the stage for the next LTS. October 9, 2025 Today Canonical announced the release of Ubuntu 25.10, codenamed “Questing Quokka,” available to download and install from ubuntu.com/do ...


ilvipero
6 October 2025

The clock is ticking: Ubuntu Summit 25.10 is just around the corner

Ubuntu Article

London has called, and the Ubuntu community has answered! This year, the Ubuntu Summit has the ambitious goal of extending its reach to everyone, no matter where they are in the world.  The event has not started yet, and we have been blown away by the excitement already! The desire to contribute to the community ...