Tag Archives: weekly

Raspberry Pi with touchscreen serves Android Auto – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) Raspberry Pi with touchscreen serves Android Auto Electronics Weekly (blog) This is not a finished product. It is not something you'd expect in a product that sells for hundreds of dollars. This is an experiment to have fun: It's like something we do in the garage for the weekend and show to our spouse/mom and they would say …

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Raspberry Pi with touchscreen serves Android Auto – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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Four ‘must-have’ Raspberry Pi add-ons – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Four 'must-have' Raspberry Pi add-ons Electronics Weekly (blog) Displays: The official Raspberry Pi 7-inch Touchscreen Display can be used with a range of educational software and programs available on the Raspberry Pi . It allows designers to build a connected picture frame, Pi alarm clocks, a plant health camera …

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Four ‘must-have’ Raspberry Pi add-ons – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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Creating a 10MHz scope HAT for the Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) Creating a 10MHz scope HAT for the Raspberry Pi ? Electronics Weekly (blog) Check out this interesting project, whether it might be possible to make a basic 10MHz oscilloscope from a Raspberry Pi 3.

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Creating a 10MHz scope HAT for the Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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Pi Desktop builds your own desktop computer – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) Pi Desktop builds your own desktop computer Electronics Weekly (blog) We've got the Pi-top, which builds your Raspberry Pi devboard into a recognisable laptop casing, and here now here comes a Pi Desktop, for a desktop computer base equivalent.

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Pi Desktop builds your own desktop computer – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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Design: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly

Design: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi ? Electronics Weekly Who better to ask than Pico Technology, the UK-based PC oscilloscope firm that already makes a 10MHz USB scope-in-a-box (the 2204A) that will plug into Raspberry Pi for under £100 – half the price of some bare-board USB scopes. https://www.picotech.com …

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Design: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly

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Updated: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly

Electronics Weekly Updated: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi ? Electronics Weekly Who better to ask than Pico Technology, the UK-based PC oscilloscope firm that already makes a 10MHz USB scope-in-a-box (the 2204A, pictured) that will plug into Raspberry Pi for under £100 – half the price of some bare-board USB scopes.

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Updated: How would you make a 10MHz scope HAT for Raspberry Pi? – Electronics Weekly

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Raspberry Pi + Cloudio == IoT prototyping – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) Raspberry Pi + Cloudio == IoT prototyping Electronics Weekly (blog) Cloudio is the name – GraspIO Cloudio – and it's an add-on for the Raspberry Pi now available from Farnell element14. Recommended Articles.

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Raspberry Pi + Cloudio == IoT prototyping – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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Farnell adds Cloudio to Raspberry Pi – Electronics Weekly

Electronics Weekly Farnell adds Cloudio to Raspberry Pi Electronics Weekly Cloudio, when combined with a Raspberry Pi , is a Full Stack IoT platform meaning that you can programme IoT devices simply and quickly with drag and drop programming on a mobile app,” says Farnell's Steve Carr, “the combination of built-in hardware …

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Farnell adds Cloudio to Raspberry Pi – Electronics Weekly

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Pi Desktop: useful, desirable, but Linux skills required – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) Pi Desktop: useful, desirable, but Linux skills required Electronics Weekly (blog) This is not unique to the Wolfson/Cirrus card, time and time again I have had the same situation with the many Raspberry Pi audio products I have tried – which is a shame, because you really have to hear how good they are to believe the sound that can …

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Pi Desktop: useful, desirable, but Linux skills required – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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