2 weeks 6 days ago
Come on by for JP’s Product Pick of The Week ! A new product pick will be revealed. The show airs at 4pm ET / 1pm PT, TODAY! Check out the livestream right here inside this product page you won’t want to miss it because there will be a HUGE DISCOUNT during the show! Tune […]
John Park
2 weeks 6 days ago
This is a scientific BCD calculator that uses binary-coded decimals, the same internal number format HP used in its scientific calculators going back to the 1970s. It represents every decimal digit as a 4-bit nibble, which means perfect decimal accuracy, no floating-point conversion errors, and an architecture that is genuinely shaped by the problem it […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
While it is in the name, you don’t actually need a Raspberry Pi to protect yourself from ads. Pi-hole will run on any hardware that meets the minimal requirements and is running one of the many supported operating systems. Switch and Click uses Docker to turn an old computer into an ad-blocker for the […]
Ben
2 weeks 6 days ago
Be on Reddit next Thursday 21st May, 3–5pm BST to see Eben Upton (CEO), James Adams (CTO of Hardware Engineering), and Gordon Hollingworth (CTO of Software Engineering) at Raspberry Pi. They will answer your questions, with a focus on industrial and embedded use of Raspberry Pi. Between the three, they will cover the full stack, […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
NEW PRODUCT – Machined Red Aluminum Servo Arm – 1.75″ Long If you’ve bought a servo from us, you probably got a bunch of plastic add-ons that you can snap onto the servo’s rotating shaft. These are called ‘servo horns’ and the standard ones you’ll get are plastic pieces. They’re good but often short and […]
Angelica
2 weeks 6 days ago
Adam Hughes writes about the sensors contained in modern smartphones and how they can be used, especially with web browsers. Your phone is dense with sensors. Cameras and microphones, of course, but also accelerometers, gyroscopes, magnetometers, ambient light sensors, GPS, Bluetooth radios. Most of them are accessible from a web page — a single HTML […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
Dmitry Grinberg posts about the Fisher Price Pixter and the first ever complete reverse engineering, documentation, emulation, and preservation of all Fisher-Price/Mattel Pixter device series and [almost] all the games. Fisher-Price (owned by Mattel) produced some toys in the early 2000 under the Pixter brand. They were touchscreen-based drawing toys, with cartridge-based extra games one could plug in. […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
J. B. Crawford posts on the Computers Are Bad newsletter about Very Low Frequency and Extremely Low Frequency transmitters as used by the US, mainly for submarine communications. Radio communications with the US Navy dates back to 1887. And use on submarines started with launching new vehicles in 1909. Early tests didn’t go well. It […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
NYPL shared this list of Pulitzer Prize winners and finalists that are available at the library. What a way to pick to your next read or listen! Each year the Pulitzer Prize recognizes excellence in journalism, books, drama, and music. The literary awards include fiction, nonfiction, history, biography, memoir/autobiography, and poetry and make for an […]
Stephanie
2 weeks 6 days ago
Super fun (and super cute-looking) project from maker gokux: While many makers are busy building desk buddіes, I wanted to try something unique. I wonderеd if a fortune cookie could actually hold an ΕSP32. This idea led to the eFortune Cookie, a smаll interactive gadget featuring an e-paper disрlay. By simply shaking the device, a […]
Kelly
2 weeks 6 days ago
You can do almost anything in your browser. Your agents should be able to as well. But when agent products are built on top of existing browsers, they inevitably run into captchas, login failures, and blocked sessions. Rotunda is a browser forked from Firefox and honest about fingerprinting. It’s designed so the agent on your […]
Anne Barela
2 weeks 6 days ago
Inside the Heathkit Factory: How a $39.50 Kit Built Michigan’s Empire…. Then Lost Everything. If you were tto walk into any electronics lab in the 1970s, you’d find Heathkits—oscilloscopes, multimeters, signal generators—equipment people had built themselves and understood completely. In 1947, a $39.50 oscilloscope kit changed American electronics forever. It wasn’t sophisticated. It wasn’t pretty. […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
If you missed this week’s Python on Microcontrollers Newsletter, here is the ICYMI (in case you missed it) version. To never miss another issue, subscribe now! – You’ll get a terrific newsletter each Monday (which is out before this post). 12,368 subscribers worldwide! The next newsletter goes out Monday morning and subscribing is the best way to keep […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
The original ayumi AY-3-8910 / AY-8912 emulation library by true-grue is mathematically perfect, but it uses double (64-bit) floating-point numbers. The ESP32-S3 microcontroller has no hardware FPU for double, causing I2S underruns and crackling. The AY8912_ESP32 library re-implements the exact same logic using float (32-bit) numbers. The ESP32-S3 hardware FPU handles float natively, leaving CPU […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
Zane St. John plugged in a $35 projector from AliExpress and pointed it at a bedroom wall. Within minutes of connecting it to WiFi, the home Pi-hole security portal lit up due to issues. When I powered it on, the experience was more professional than expected. Android 11 (API 30), production build (not signed with […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
The Python for Microcontrollers Newsletter is the place for the latest news involving Python on hardware (microcontrollers AND single board computers like Raspberry Pi). This ad-free, spam-free weekly email is filled with CircuitPython, MicroPython, and Python information that you may have missed, all in one place! You get a summary of all the software, events, projects, and the latest hardware worldwide once a week, no […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
LEET modular is a multifunctional Eurorack compatible module. It is versatile, easy to build, cheap and MIT-licensed open source. Current implemented (rudimentary) functions: VCO / Oscillators (with different waveforms, AM, FM, folding, quantization, and other features) LFO VCF (with a few different low pass filters) Noise generator Delay/ reverb MIDI to CV (USB-C) Initialization / […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
Summer is quickly approaching. Don’t sweat in the subway, print a squeezable fan! Check out this cool design from GeorgeZSL shared via instructables Let’s just admit it, all of the squeeze fans available are just toys. They are fun to play around for 5 minutes, but cannot really be used functionally. The wind is too […]
Takara
3 weeks ago
Japi Base — Jan’s Pico Projects Base is a well-documented, hackable retro computer built on a Raspberry Pi Pico 2 (RP2350). Japi Base provides all the basic I/O of a small computer — video, keyboard, storage and sound — on a single core and a single PIO block, leaving the second core and the remaining PIOs completely free […]
Anne Barela
3 weeks ago
At the Outline Demoparty in May 2026, Ommen, NL was an exploration of algorithmic density in 16 bytes of x86 assembly. In the demoscene, exploring what can be achieved within extreme constraints is a rewarding technical challenge. The following 16 bytes of x86 real-mode DOS assembly code represent a careful exercise in algorithmic density. When […]
Anne Barela
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1 hour 47 minutes ago
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