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Think you need a high-end PC to learn coding? Think again
You don't need fancy hardware to get started on your coding journey. A low-spec computer will likely be more than you need to ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has released the 6th edition of its official Beginner’s Guide, and the timing could not be better. With the holiday season coming up, many people (techy nerds) will be ...
How fitting that Raspberry Pi Foundation chose a throwback Thursday to unveil its Raspberry Pi 500+, an all-in-one PC that gives off some serious Commodore 64 vibes. Or as the Foundation puts it, the ...
Nearly a decade ago, Raspberry Pi showed that it’s possible to cram a fully functional computer into a tiny package that’s about the size of a stick of chewing gum or about the size of a USB flash ...
The Elecrow CrowPi 3 is a kit that provides a bunch of tools and resources to help young people develop computer science skills. The kit is about the size of a small, but chunky laptop. But instead of ...
What if the tech you thought was obsolete still had a place in your life? The original Raspberry Pi, a tiny computer that debuted in 2012, may seem like a relic in 2025’s world of multi-core ...
Abstract: This paper proposes a method for controlling a wireless robot for surveillance using an application built on Android platform. The Android application will open a web-page which has video ...
In a previous article, I looked at Raspberry's latest computer, the Pi 500. What sets it apart from other computers I have used is that Raspberry took their latest ARM-based single-board computer (SBC ...
Last month Raspberry announced a major Christmas gift for its users: the Raspberry Pi 500 keyboard computer and the Raspberry Pi Monitor. Not only were they available, but they could be purchased for ...
Raspberry Pi has just released its new computer-in-a-keyboard, the Raspberry Pi 500, the successor to the Raspberry Pi 400. It shares most of the same internal components as the Raspberry Pi 5, but ...
In a nutshell: Interested in tinkering with a Raspberry Pi 5 but put off by the utilitarian nature of a bare PCB, or simply prefer to work with something that is ready to use right out of the box?
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