Tag Archives: guide

Rebroadcast Internet Radio On FM With A Raspberry Pi – Lifehacker Australia

Lifehacker Australia Rebroadcast Internet Radio On FM With A Raspberry Pi Lifehacker Australia You'll need a Raspberry Pi alongside an Adafruit FM transmitter (you can also just hack in your own antenna, no purchase required with this guide). When you're finished, you'll have be able to transmit up to 9m. It's certainly easier for most of us to ..

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Rebroadcast Internet Radio On FM With A Raspberry Pi – Lifehacker Australia

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Our 1000th blog post!

We recently noticed that we were soon to be approaching our 1000th post since our blog began in July 2011 , and thought we ought to curate some stats and share some of our proudest moments from this incredible journey with you! Eben set up the blog to let people know about developments of the Raspberry Pi and its use in education. This is what the website looked like back then: We’ve come a long way since that first post: the blog has seen two ( 2013 , 2014 ) major redesigns (as well as that joke one ), and it’s brought you eight product launches ( Model B , Model B rev2 , Model A , Camera module , Pi NoIR camera , Compute module , Model B+ , Model A+ and Pi 2 Model B ); we’ve announced Picademy , free learning resources , our million pound education fund , we announced we’re sending Pis to the International Space Station , we’ve run several competitions and many more education initiatives as well as featuring countless amazing Raspberry Pi projects.

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Our 1000th blog post!

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Here’s how to build the ultimate retro gaming machine with Raspberry Pi or Pi 2 – Digital Trends

Digital Trends Here's how to build the ultimate retro gaming machine with Raspberry Pi or Pi 2 Digital Trends Updated 3/20/2015: We've confirmed this information also applies to the Raspberry Pi 2, which is quicker than its predecessor, and have changed the guide to reflect this.

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Here’s how to build the ultimate retro gaming machine with Raspberry Pi or Pi 2 – Digital Trends

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Slim Down a Raspberry Pi with a Few Mods – Lifehacker

Slim Down a Raspberry Pi with a Few Mods Lifehacker The Raspberry Pi is already pretty tiny, but if you need to slim it down even more for a project, then Adafruit has the guide for you. Adafruit shows you how to get rid of the bulky Ethernet port, replace the USB ports with smaller ones, and even trim …

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Slim Down a Raspberry Pi with a Few Mods – Lifehacker

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Unix: Raspberry Pi: A Quick-Start Guide, Second Edition, Maik Schmidt – ITworld.com

Unix: Raspberry Pi : A Quick-Start Guide, Second Edition, Maik Schmidt ITworld.com computers. It will give you enough information about the Raspberry Pi to make intelligent decisions about how you install and configure the smallest computer you have ever owned and then take you on a tour of some very impressive things that you can …

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Unix: Raspberry Pi: A Quick-Start Guide, Second Edition, Maik Schmidt – ITworld.com

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Geeky Fun for Friday: A Beginner’s Guide to Raspberry Pi – Data Center Knowledge

Geeky Fun for Friday: A Beginner's Guide to Raspberry Pi Data Center Knowledge Raspberry Pi – the little case-less computer that can fit in your pocket- generates enough power to run your home media center, a VPN, and a lot more. But before you can kick back and watch movies on this $35 machine, you need to configure it and …

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Geeky Fun for Friday: A Beginner’s Guide to Raspberry Pi – Data Center Knowledge

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Merry Christmas! Got a new Pi? Read on!

If you’re here because you got a Raspberry Pi for Christmas, then Happy Christmas – and welcome to the Raspberry Pi family! If you’re just here for fun, then Happy Christmas too! The Raspberry Pi is a computer that you can use for all sort of brilliant and useful things, from learning to program, to making robots, to Tweeting when birds visit a nesting box, to taking pictures from the stratosphere. Here are some tips on getting setting up and using your Raspberry Pi.

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Merry Christmas! Got a new Pi? Read on!

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Turn your Pi into a low-cost HD surveillance cam

Local government CCTV is awful, and it’s everywhere in the UK. But I’m much happier about surveillance in the hands of private people – it’s a matter of quis custodiet ipsos custodes?  (Who watches the watchmen?), and I’m pleased to see the Raspberry Pi bring the price of networked motion-sensitive HD surveillance cameras down to be affordable by consumers. Off the shelf, you’re looking at prices in the hundreds of pounds

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Turn your Pi into a low-cost HD surveillance cam

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Akkie, and the 101 things you can do with a CD-ROM drive’s eject function

I met Akira Ouchi – or  Akkie , as he prefers to be known (his site’s in Japanese, but you can use an auto-translation service) at the Big Raspberry Jam in Tokyo back in May. Although we didn’t have much, if any, language in common (besides Python), we became friends instantly.

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Akkie, and the 101 things you can do with a CD-ROM drive’s eject function

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