All SONOFF WiFi and Zigbee home automation devices can now work with the Matter protocol. This can be done in two ways: ...
The Raspberry Pi 5 is a credit card-sized computer with a quad-core Arm Cortex-A76 processor and up to 16GB of RAM. It also has plenty of I/O capabilities thanks to support for WiFi, Bluetooth, ...
The Raspberry Pi might sound like dessert, but it's actually a credit card–sized computer changing the world of DIY tech. First launched in 2012 by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, it was designed to make ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 (and 400) systems are versions of the Raspberry Pi built for people who use the Raspberry Pi as a general-purpose computer rather than a hobbyist appliance. Now the company is ...
Android Auto turned ten years old this year, and most automakers have adopted it by now. But unless you drive a car from the past couple of years, chances are that it does not support wireless Android ...
Abstract: The "Wild Animal Detection System for Trekkers using Raspberry Pi" aims to design a smart stick that can detect wild animals in real-time environment and alert to trekkers, it guaranteeing ...
Raspberry Pi has introduced and released the new Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5. I happen to have four Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 devices on my bench along with a couple of Raspberry Pi Compute ...
In 2020, I went on a writing spree, producing several articles about running VMware's bare-metal, type 1 hypervisor, ESXi 7, on a Raspberry Pi 4. In fact, I wrote so many that a publisher from ...
The Raspberry Pi isn't as secure as you may have thought. It’s been quite a year already, for security researchers disclosing groundbreaking research of the hacking variety. What with the iPhone USB-C ...
Last month Raspberry announced a major Christmas gift for its users: the Raspberry Pi 500 keyboard computer and the Raspberry Pi Monitor. Not only were they available, but they could be purchased for ...
In a nutshell: Interested in tinkering with a Raspberry Pi 5 but put off by the utilitarian nature of a bare PCB, or simply prefer to work with something that is ready to use right out of the box?
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