A Raspberry Pi home automation project enables controlling lights, sensors, and smart devices via open-source software, turning any house into a smart home.
All you need to do is add a Z-Wave USB stick to your Raspberry Pi, and you expand the compatible device list drastically.
Explore the potential of Raspberry Pi-powered underwater WiFi, from enabling real-time communication and media sharing to advancing marine research and safety.
Want to learn more about sensors, wireless communications, or electronics in general? Check out all the educational videos and tap into the knowledge of experts on our Elektor YouTube channel and our ...
The Internet of Things (IoT) is rapidly transforming soil science, offering unprecedented capabilities for contemporary land management, environmental ...
Learn essential power solutions for Raspberry Pi 5 to prevent crashes, fix voltage drops, and ensure reliable performance in ...
Like the original Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+, the new Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ (Compact) is a small board that connects to a Raspberry Pi 5’s FPC connector to give you an M.2 slot with support for SSDs or ...
At the heart of the Raspberry Pi CM0 is a Raspberry Pi RP3A0 system in a package that combines a 1 GHz Broadcom BCM2710A1 quad-core ARM Cortex-A43 processor with 512MB of LPDDR2 RAM. The module also ...
The Raspberry Pi is one of the most versatile and accessible pieces of hardware available today. Originally designed to promote computer science education, it has since evolved into a go-to tool for ...
What if you could transform a humble Raspberry Pi into a fully functional network-attached storage (NAS) server? It sounds ambitious, even improbable, given the Raspberry Pi’s reputation as a ...
A starter kit from Prophesee enables low-power, high-speed event-based vision on the Raspberry Pi 5 single-board computer. Based on the GenX320 Metavision event-based vision sensor, the kit ...
George Orwell might’ve predicted the surveillance state, but it’s still surprising how many entities took 1984 as a how-to manual instead of a cautionary tale. [Benn Jordan] decided to take a closer ...