Devices/Embedded and Open Hardware/Modding: Raspberry Pi and More
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Raspberry Pi Weekly Issue #485 - Introducing the Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 and USB 3 Hub
Ashley will be back with the regularly scheduled programming soon, promise Hello again, The sun is setting on another double product launch week… ahhhhh. And relaxxxxxx. On Monday we released Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2, offering higher resolution and a slimmer form factor, with the display driver PCB integrated into the housing. And, get this — it costs the SAME as its predecessor: Touch Display 2 is available now for $60. Then on Thursday, the Raspberry Pi USB 3 Hub launched at $12.
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[Repeat] Tom's Hardware ☛ Super tiny Raspberry Pi RP2040 RGB LED matrix display hits Kickstarter
When we say the Nova is tiny, we mean it. It's so small it can fit on your thumb but manages to pack a 7 x 10 matrix full of RGB LEDs. This board is similar to Pimoroni's Pico Unicorn Pack but is much smaller and more compact. If you want to know more about the Pico Unicorn Pack, you can check out our review posted by Les back in 2021.
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Raspberry Pi ☛ Raspberry Pi AI Kit projects
With their powerful AI accelerator modules, Raspberry Pi’s Camera Module and AI Kit open up exciting possibilities in computer vision and machine learning. The versatility of the Raspberry Pi platform, combined with AI capabilities, opens up a world of new possibilities for innovative smart projects. From creative experiments to practical applications like smart pill dispensers, makers are harnessing the kit’s potential to push the boundaries of AI. In this feature, we explore some standout projects, and hope they inspire you to embark on your own.
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Tom's Hardware ☛ Raspberry Pi 5 overclocked to 3.6 GHz by ScatterBencher — but exotic cooling didn’t help push clocks any faster than air
Liquid nitrogen, a voltage mod, a new oscillator, updated software, and other tweaks couldn’t push the Raspberry Pi 5 any faster.
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Tom's Hardware ☛ Open source, single-PCB HIDman adapter lets peripherals to easily interface with old PCs that don't support USB
The open source HIDman adapter debuts, for interfacing modern USB peripherals with old PCs by emulating classic PS/2 keyboards and mice.
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Tom's Hardware ☛ Open source, single-PCB HIDman adapter lets peripherals to easily interface with old PCs that don't support USB
Earlier this week, open-source developer and YouTuber TheRasteri announced a single-PCB open-source USB to HID adapter project, the HIDman— aimed at providing a more compact solution to USB to HID adapters than existing, cited open-source solutions like USB4VC and ps2x2.
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Wouter Groeneveld ☛ Sound Card CPU Interference
Remember when I said that if you muddle with vintage hardware mixtures, one thing gets fixed but the other has a very big tendency to break? I was trying to save this for the PicoGUS post but that’ll have to wait as debugging the current problem is giving me a headache. You see, I kind of sort of maybe perhaps broke my Vintage Sound Blaster 16. I think.