In the eight and a bit years since the first model launched, the Raspberry Pi has traditionally been sold as a modular computer. You buy the board separately, attach your own peripherals, insert an SD ...
Makers or car enthusiasts wanting to upgrade their in car computer may be interested in this DIY Raspberry Pi car computer project published to the official Raspberry Pi magazine website by Rob ...
After building a DIY handheld computer based on a Raspberry Pi last year, developer rahmanshaber is back with version 2. In a nutshell, this mobile computer is designed to add a QWERTY keyboard, a ...
Raspberry Pi, the U.K.-based manufacturer of single board computers (SBCs), has been making these affordable, capable computing modules for a decade now. Over the years, the company has developed ...
In context: The low-cost Raspberry Pi computer is a revered piece of hardware among DIY enthusiasts who'll find the new Raspberry Pi 400 a much more accessible, user-friendly way to get tinkering with ...
The newest Raspberry Pi 400 almost-all-in-one computer is very, very slick. Fitting in the size of a small portable keyboard, it’s got a Pi 4 processor of the 20% speedier 1.8 GHz variety, 4 GB of RAM ...
The Raspberry Pi is an inexpensive computer designed for education and DIY purposes. For about $35 you get a tiny device with a processor, memory, input and output, and a memory card slot. Just insert ...
When it comes to the types of products and stories I cover, I’m rarely the most popular guy in the office. When Apple released all its new MacBooks several weeks ago, we had marketing folks streaming ...
British charity hopes to get ultra-low-cost Linux computers into hands of children in both the developed and developing world. Eric Mack has been a CNET contributor since 2011. Eric and his family ...
Raspberry Pi project has been published this week by developer and enthusiast Adrian Rosebrock providing full instructions and all the code required to build your very own Raspberry Pi security camera ...
Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, digital photography, AI, quantum computing, computer science, materials science, supercomputers, drones, browsers, 3D ...