The Raspberry Pi Foundation has been putting power into the hands of DIY maestros for years. These projects improve comfort and convenience of your home.
Raspberry Pi and braided careers – two new and different approaches to training the next generation of tech workers Two ...
The benefits of smart home automation may keep you from ever going back to a "dumb" home again. Controlling the temperature, turning on the lights, locking the doors, and seeing who's at the door — ...
One company has found an unusual way to help heat an apartment and build a network of data centers in the process. It takes ...
What if your Raspberry Pi could do more than just compute, it could see the world like you do? Imagine a tiny device that doesn’t just identify a dog in a photo but tells you whether it’s lounging on ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 (and 400) systems are versions of the Raspberry Pi built for people who use the Raspberry Pi as a general-purpose computer rather than a hobbyist appliance. Now the company is ...
Orange Pi 6 Plus board has a 12-core CPU, 45 TOPS AI performance, dual 5 Gb Ethernet ports, and up to 64GB RAM ...
Have you ever settled in for a movie night, only to be interrupted by an endless stream of ads on your favorite streaming platforms even though you are paying for a subscription? It’s frustrating, isn ...
You can get all kinds of great wildlife footage if you trek out into the woods with a camera, but it can be tough to stay awake all night. However, this is a task you can readily automate, as [Luke] ...
The Raspberry Pi 5 is the first single-board computer from Raspberry Pi to feature support for PCIe add-ons like M.2 SSDs. But since there’s no M.2 slot on the board itself you need an adaptor board ...
Raspberry Pi fait la une de l'actualité avec un ordinateur tout-en-un à la fois bien plus puissant et bien plus moderne. Un futur best-seller ? Le Pi 500 promet d'être une machine remarquable de ...
The Raspberry Pi 500, like its predecessor the 400, is basically a Pi computer crammed into a budget keyboard in a retro throwback. And as cool as it is, I confess that as PCWorld’s resident keyboard ...