Using a Raspberry Pi mini PC and a receipt thermal printer Arvid Larsson has created an awesome portable camera that is capable of recording and saving videos as well as acting like an instant camera.
Liz from Blitz City DIY has published a new Raspberry Pi thermal camera she has created on the Hackster.io website, powered by the Raspberry Pi an AMG8833 thermal camera sensor. The AMG8833 thermal ...
Despite what you may have read in the comments, we here at Hackaday are not unaware that there’s something of a “Pi Fatigue” brewing. Similar to how “Arduino” was once a dirty word around these parts, ...
High up on the list of desirable technologies that are edging into the realm of the affordable for the experimenter is the thermal camera. Once the exclusive preserve of those with huge budgets, over ...
You can make a lot of cool things by stuffing a Raspberry Pi computer into an existing chassis. We’ve seen hackers do everything from turn an old portable DVD player into a modern Kodi-powered media ...
Instant cameras have come a long way since the days of the emulsion prints of Polaroid. Take for example, Impossible Project’s new I–1 camera, a sleek instant camera controlled by an accompanying ...
Polaroids are great, but if you want to make your own weird version, Hackaday user Muth has a guide that links up a Raspberry Pi and camera to a thermal printer. The project uses a Raspberry Pi Zero, ...
Raspberry Pi, the company that sells tiny, cheap, single-board computers, is releasing an add-on that is going to open up several use cases — and yes, because it’s 2024, there’s an AI angle. Called ...
The SoC contains a quad-core 64-bit Arm Cortex-A76 CPU with cryptography extensions along with a VideoCore VII GPU that supports OpenGL ES 3.1 and Vulkan 1.2, unlike the earlier 1.8-GHz quad ...
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