Tag Archives: magpi

The MagPi issue 35 – next month we’re in print!

Issue 35 of The MagPi is here.  It’s rammed full of projects, and features some of the most amazing builds and hacks we’ve seen so far this year. We’ve got 22 pages of step-by-step tutorials and the chance to win a beautiful Raspberry Pi robot (thanks to  Dawn Robotics ). For me, the absolute highlight this month is Mike Cook’s sprinting game, which will have you building physical controllers you operate with jogging feet.

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The MagPi issue 35 – next month we’re in print!

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The MagPi Issue 34 – out now!

Welcome to another edition of the official Raspberry Pi magazine! As always, The MagPi is free to download , and comes brimming with project ideas, tutorials, news, and much, much more. My favourites this month? The clock hack, the 0.25 scale, Pi-powered racing car (that gets up to 150kmph despite its adorable teenyness), and best of all, Mike’s Safari Park Challenge, in which Mike Cook has you building a mathematical puzzle that makes zebra noises.

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The MagPi Issue 34 – out now!

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MagPi issue 25 – out now!

For your weekend reading pleasure, here’s issue 25 of the MagPi! Published just yesterday, the latest issue of everyone’s favourite free, monthly, community-produced Raspberry Pi magazine is as full of fantastic stuff as ever. Click to read The MagPi! The cover story is one that’ll definitely get some attention in our house this weekend: it’s a full Python simulation of the Pocket Enigma Cipher Machine, a cleverly devised toy that demonstrates some of the principles of a real Enigma machine like the one many of you will recognise in the cover photo

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MagPi issue 25 – out now!

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MagPi issue 24, out now!

The MagPi’s a little late this month, but it’s full of good things. The MagPi is the free magazine for Raspberry Pi enthusiasts, written, typeset and edited by the community for the community

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MagPi issue 24, out now!

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The MagPi – Kickstart the Volume 2 Binder for 432 pages of Pi goodness!

The MagPi magazine is the single thing to have come out of the Raspberry Pi community that I’m proudest of, in a sort of godmotherly way – we at the Raspberry Pi Foundation do not have any association with The MagPi besides thinking it’s the best thing since sliced maltloaf. They’ve got a new Kickstarter running. The MagPi is a monthly free download, full of projects, tutorials, reviews and interviews about the Raspberry Pi.

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The MagPi – Kickstart the Volume 2 Binder for 432 pages of Pi goodness!

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Touchscreen point-and-shoot, from Adafruit

LadyAda from Adafruit is one of my very favourite people. We have a tradition of spending at least one evening eating Korean barbecue whenever I visit New York. We have told each other many secrets over bowls of fizzy fermented rice beverage, posed for photographs in front of plastic meats, been filmed pointing at electronics for the New York Times, and behaved very badly together in Pinkberry in September

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Touchscreen point-and-shoot, from Adafruit

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The Magpi goes Infrared – ElectronicsWeekly.com

ElectronicsWeekly.com The Magpi goes Infrared ElectronicsWeekly.com Andrew Back of RS Components takes a look at the night-vision, nature-watching capabilities of the Pi NoiR. Inside the covers there's also an article on the Raspberry Pi at CERN, the PiVision GUI, and another Scratch programming tutorial with BrickPi …

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The Magpi goes Infrared – ElectronicsWeekly.com

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The MagPi issue 17, out now

October’s edition of The MagPi , the Raspberry Pi community magazine, which is written, edited and produced by Pi users for Pi users, is available for free download now. If you’re a robotics hobbyist, you’ll find lots to occupy yourself in this month’s issue: there’s a thorough discussion of the BrickPi, a new addon from Dexter Industries which will allow you to connect your Pi to LEGO NXT motors, and pointers to projects you can make yourself with the setup, interfacing with Python and with Scratch.

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The MagPi issue 17, out now

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