Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
The Gertboard is coming - a capable, inexpensive expansion board for the soon-to-ship Raspberry Pi. The Gertboard is will make it much simpler to interface the Raspberry Pi to the outside world. It provides access to the Pi's ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
The folks at raspberry pi have been working working on an add-on GPIO expansion board. Use it to flash LEDs on and off, drive motors, run sensors and all that other fun stuff. This move brings the Raspberry PI much closer to ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Many of you already probably know about the Raspberry Pi Foundation 25 USD ARM Linux Computer.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
PCMCIA Computer Project Aims Even Higher (and Cheaper) Than Raspberry Pi. 24 Mins Ago. slashdot.org: lkcl writes "An initiative by a Community Interest Company Rhombus Tech aims to provide Software (Libre) ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
When a Raspberry Pi $25 PC creates an coming subsequent year, it won't be a usually square of hardware accessible to buy from a foundation's online store. Today, it has been suggested a initial enlargement house for a ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
When the Raspberry Pi $25 PC makes an appearance next year, it won't be the only piece of hardware available to buy from the foundation's online store. Today, it has been revealed the first expansion board for the tiny ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Move over Raspberry Pi: CuBox enters the fray with 1GB DDR3 RAM, dualcore CPU, HDMI, GBit LAN… all inside a cubed box. Previously, we've talked about the Raspberry Pi and it's glory. Sure, for a $25/$35 device, it's not ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Raspberry Pi is an ultra low-cost computer designed for teaching computer programming to children.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
The idea of a full-featured, ARM-based Linux board for $25 as an educational product is rapidly gaining traction and the Raspberry Pi organization is what’s driving the idea. The board’s based on a Broadcom chip.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
The GuardianWhat present are you wrapping up for teacher this Christmas?
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
And speaking of low-cost computers like the OLPC, Slashdot has a post about a company developing a micro-sized computer on a circuit board that will be three.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Raspberry Pi ☯ · Click on the image to zoom in. I've started keeping tabs on this largely because it would make a killer network computer, but the media angle is interesting as well. See Also ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
The Gertboard, by Gert van Loo, is introduced over at the Pi-site blog. It is an extension board for all the tinkerers out there. It provides LEDs, GPIO, sensor inputs and motor drives. The plan is to sell it alongside Raspberry Pi.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
My self-built giant 7-segment white LED display is waiting for its @Raspberry_Pi to make a great 60W clock.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
lkcl writes "An initiative by a Community Interest Company Rhombus Tech aims to provide Software (Libre) Developers with a PCMCIA-sized modular computer that could end up in mass-volume products.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Anyways…for my 0.3 I had planned on testing all of the tools and utilities that I was experimenting with in my 0.2 release except this time I wanted to test them on the actual Raspberry PI device itself.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Analysis Despite all the excitement and expectation encompassing the RaspberryPi, the most remarkable thing about this low-power credit card-sized computer is its price tag: little more than £20 for a fully functional system ...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Gearburn Award: Best Innovation in Hardware 2011MemeburnWe ran a story about FXI's Cotton Candy a month back, and there's the more academic Raspberry Pi project.
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
FSM | Encouraging the next generation of hackers part 1 - Raspberry Pi the $25 computer: If you keep your eyes a...
|
Scooped by
F. Thunus
|
Seneca students have collaborated with the Raspberry Pi Foundation – www.raspberrypi.org – and the Fedora Project to prepare open source software to run on this device. More information on Seneca's Centre for ...
|