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The system uses a Raspberry Pi and camera to handle the face recognition, and then a servo lock the box. The end result is a pretty simple little lockbox that you'll unlock with your face.
For face recognition to work well, we’re going to need some horsepower, so we recommend a minimum of Raspberry Pi 3B+, ideally a Raspberry Pi 4. The extra memory will make all the difference.
Hackster.io member MJRoBot has created a real-time Raspberry Pi face recognition system which is kindly been published to the Hackster.io site enabling you to add it to your own projects and ...
A Raspberry Pi is at the heart of the electronics hardware, with a servo mounted Pi-camera and speaker-microphone pair taking care of video and audio.
The robot parses that response and gives an appropriate canned speech using the text-to-speech software, eSpeak e.g. “You seem happy! Tell me why you are so happy!”.
The PiDog programmable robot kit challenges you to assemble and code a Raspberry Pi–powered dog that can respond to commands, recognize faces, and even use natural language processing.
The Raspberry Pi single-board computers have allowed the creation of small robots, but one avid maker has taken robot miniaturization to the extreme. Although details are sparse at the moment ...
Hugging Face’s new programmable Reachy Mini bots launched this week. The AI robots are open source, Raspberry Pi-powered, and come with cartoonish antennae and big googly eyes.