The Raspberry Pi eye is a £20 camera module that shoots 5-megapixel photos and high-definition video for your home-built computer. Richard Trenholm Former Movie and TV Senior Editor Richard Trenholm ...
The theme for this year’s PA Consulting’s Raspberry Pi Competition 2018 was Sustainability. More than 100 schools were challenged to build projects around the credit card-sized computer that could ...
Hack A Day member Timothy Giles has created a very unique Raspberry Pi powered rotating picture frame, which incorporates both a Raspberry Pi and a little Arduino hardware to rotate the frame smoothly ...
You might be unfamiliar with what traditional Raspberry Pi cameras are and how they work. Well, at the core, these setups consist of a Pi module with a camera sensor. You can find a barebone kit and ...
[Roo] was tasked with finding a better way to take corporate employee photos. The standard method was for a human resources employee to use a point and shoot camera to take a photo of the new recruits ...
Dave Akerman is probably the first person to send a Raspberry Pi into space. His pioneering journey began back in June 2012, and his latest mission took place recently. This was his 6th flight with ...
We already know the Raspberry Pi makes a great photo frame, but DIYer Paul Stamatiou took it another step and integrated in Google Photos. Stamatiou took a frame, stuffed a small display inside, ...
The Etch A Sketch was never supposed to meet a Raspberry Pi, a camera, or a mathematical algorithm, but here we are. [Tekavou]’s Teka-Cam and TekaSketch are a two-part hack that transforms real photos ...
One of the marvelous things about the dirt cheap $25 Raspberry Pi computer is that if you accidentally destroy it during some adventurous endeavor involving the device, you won’t have lost too much.
Over 3 years later, “deleted” Facebook photos are still online: Photos that you think you’re deleting from Facebook are still remaining on their servers years later. Ars has been following this story ...
The original Nintendo Game Boy was the size of a hotel bible, required four AA batteries, and only played games in black and white. Beautiful, isn't it? But one ambitious gentleman thought he could ...
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