In our latest resource, we show you how to create a website and use it to document your coding projects. Why document your code
Read the original:
Learn how to document your code
In our latest resource, we show you how to create a website and use it to document your coding projects. Why document your code
Read the original:
Learn how to document your code
Last week we received a surprise parcel from Mike Horne , containing a new add-on board for us to look at. Mike introduced it to us: It’s called the PiPiano and was designed and developed by 14-year-old Zachary Igielman, who is a regular at CamJam and our line-following-robot guru! He’s currently running an Indiegogo campaign for the board which he’s fitting in around his school work
Read more:
PiPiano: a musical, educational add-on board
No … we’re not adding a Start Menu or a paperclip assistant.
More:
Updates to Minecraft Documentation – and a Python 3 version is on the way!
You may remember the announcement of our new open source documentation , which is a GitHub project containing information about the Raspberry Pi hardware and software – and how to use it.
Originally posted here:
Explore your Raspberry Pi with our Online Usage Guide
You’ll notice that things round here don’t look like they used to. This website has had a comprehensive overhaul: we hope you like what you see. ( That stuff from yesterday
Follow this link:
Welcome to our new website
We know that a lot of you have iPhones – and there are some very useful things you can do with a Pi and an iPhone already, not least using SiriProxy to get your phone interacting with objects in the real world. (Once I work out how to automate emptying the cat litter, I’ll be making sure I can ask Siri to do it for me just to add an extra layer of entertainment.) There’s lots of SiriProxy work going on in the forums – head over, sign up, and join in. But there’s more! James Moore has made BerryCam available for free: it’s an app that will allow you to control your Raspberry Pi camera board direct from your iPhone, over a local network, with a pretty interface
Go here to read the rest:
BerryCam: use your Raspberry Pi camera board with your iPhone
James Hughes, last seen at the helm of a VW Camper Van heading for Dorset, has been sweating over comprehensive documentation for the Raspberry Pi camera board for some weeks now. You can download the pdf here .
The rest is here:
Camera board documentation
Here’s a guest post from Dr William Bell. Will works at CERN, and has been doing wonderful things with Raspberry Pi meetups and outreach in Switzerland (you may have read the piece in the Guardian from a few months ago about what’s going on there with the Pi ; none of this would have happened without Will).
View original post here:
Raspberry Jam, Francophone-style