Leftover Altoid tins are staple components in all types of handy, DIY projects. Once you eat the mints, the aluminum ...
Remember the good old days of dial-up internet access? Where you’d connect your Mac (or PC) to a modem, then the phone line, and your computer would then dial into a number to connect to the ...
Everything you need to build the PS-85 is available from its designer's website, even if you can't get to space ...
My smart home doesn't need a Raspberry Pi anymore, and the ESP32 just proved it ...
Nearly all prebuilt laptops come with either Windows, macOS, or Chrome OS. But there's a new contender on the market: an open ...
What if your offline Raspberry Pi AI chatbot could respond almost instantly, without spending a single extra dollar on hardware? In this walkthrough, Jdaie Lin shows how clever software optimizations ...
Over the last decade, the open-source movement has not only transformed the world of software, but also catalyzed a sweeping revolution in hardware tinkering. At the heart of this shift lies a ...
I don't need a NAS, I just wanted one. So I didn't want to spend a whole lot of money on one. Plus, I like building computers, and can easily chew up a couple weeks sifting through components and ...
The Raspberry Pi 5 is the most powerful single-board computer from Raspberry Pi to date. But it can be even more powerful if you overclock the computer’s BCM2712 quad-core ARM Cortex-A76 processor to ...
A lot of open hardware projects inluding Amiga accelerator cards and C64 VIC chip replacements have come out over the last few years that are basically "slap a Raspberry Pi on a custom PCB and emulate ...
If there's one word to describe a Raspberry Pi, it would be "versatile." This small but powerful single-board computer is designed for a wide range of DIY applications, ranging from a simple media ...
How do you celebrate your birthday? If it is not by releasing a new tiny computer, you are clearly not celebrating right. Luckily, that is exactly what Raspberry Pi did for its 5th birthday. Now we ...