Get ready for a serious Geeksgiving celebration. The Raspberry Pi Foundation today announced its latest wonder: The ultra-low-cost Raspberry Pi Zero. At $5 per unit, it may rank as the world’s ...
Using a Altoids tin and a mini Raspberry Pi Zero PC that are available to purchase for $5, YouTube user has created a awesome portable games system complete with its own tiny screen and controllers.
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. As the name may suggest, the mintyPi 2.0 is sudomod’s second attempt at building a Raspberry Pi-powered Altoids ...
If you would like to create a Raspberry Pi Zero pocket workstation using an old Altoids tin complete with tiny monitor, a project published to the HackMyPi website by MWAGNER might be worth more ...
We’ve seen our fair share of Altoids mint tin projects and it seems the tin… can always house another interesting project. This time [MWAGNER] managed to make his long time idea of having a computer ...
Broadcom engineer Eben Upton started a foundation with a simple goal: to make and sell an inexpensive computer that could help teach children computer programming. The result: Upton created the ...
[Kite] has been making custom PCBs for GameBoys for a long time. Long enough, in fact, that other people have used his work to build even more feature-rich GameBoy platforms. Unfortunately some of ...
The Altoids mints tin is perhaps the most iconic part of the product (which may say something about the mints themselves, I guess?), and in today's life hack-obsessed world, people have long been ...