These Raspberry Pi 5 accessories turn a bare board into a rock solid home server you can actually trust with your data and ...
January 2024: A Pimoroni NVME-base was added to the Pi5 with the OLED display. It was an easy install and the only change was to use 4 plastic standoffs with a 2mm shorter length - i.e. the same as ...
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, ...
We are all familiar enough by now with the succession of boards that have come from Raspberry Pi in Cambridge over the years, ...
Want to try or install a Linux distribution (distro) on your computer? Making a bootable flash drive with an image of the distro is the simplest route these days. I've done it dozens of times, and ...
Build a voice assistant on Raspberry Pi using ElevenLabs and Open Meteo, so you get live forecasts hands free.
Maybe your gaming laptop doesn’t have enough storage. Or you simply want an easy way to make your game library portable. An external SSD can fix both of these issues (and more) by providing an easy ...
What if you could replace every streaming service you subscribe to with a single, tiny device that costs less than $100? It sounds almost too good to be true in a world where Netflix, Disney Plus, and ...
External USB/Thunderbolt SSDs and/or hard drives (aka direct-attached storage, or DAS) are a super-convenient way to add storage capacity to your system as well as back it up. External drives are also ...
Upgrading to a good SSD can make your computer feel brand new again. Apps open faster, files move in a blink and even older machines start to feel a lot more responsive. It is one of the easiest ways ...
If you do, then you’re in luck, thanks to the Suptronics X1013 expansion board for the Raspberry Pi 5, which adds ten USB ports for a total of fourteen USB ports! The board connects to the 16-pin FFC ...
Want to build your own custom Raspbian SD card image? Like enabling ssh, modifying /boot/config.txt, doing an apt update, enabling VNC, or installing something? Have a pile of sd cards and curious ...