Already using NumPy, Pandas, and Scikit-learn? Here are seven more powerful data wrangling tools that deserve a place in your ...
Looking for the best Raspberry Pi projects of 2025? Our top 10 list shows you how to build a retro game console, a weather ...
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 ...
Accelerate your tech game Paid Content How the New Space Race Will Drive Innovation How the metaverse will change the future of work and society Managing the ...
What if your next computer wasn’t a sleek laptop or a bulky desktop, but something entirely unexpected, like a mechanical keyboard? The Raspberry Pi 500 Plus takes this bold concept and makes it a ...
We feel for [Jeff Geerling]. He spent a lot of effort building an AI cluster out of Raspberry PI boards and $3,000 later, he’s a bit regretful. As you can see in the video below, it is a neat build.
So, you’re thinking about getting into smart home stuff, huh? It can seem a bit much at first, but it’s actually pretty doable. We’re going to look at setting up Home Assistant on a Raspberry Pi 3, ...
Abstract: Raspberry Pi has established itself in the world of computer technology enthusiasts due to its low cost, high processing power in a compact board, the availability of several interfaces, ...
Computer Science and Engineering Ph.D. student Nayan Bhatia demonstrates Pulse-Fi, technology that uses WiFi signals to measure a person's heart rate. Heart rate is one of the most basic and important ...
Raspberry Pi’s single-board computers are full-fledged PCs that can work with a wide variety of accessories. But every now and then the folks that make the little PCs introduce first-party hardware ...
In the past, we have seen various consumer-grade Arduino and Raspberry Pi-based robot dogs like the Petoi Bittle and XGO 2, as well as the XGO Mini Pro built around the Kendryte K210/K510 AI processor ...
What if you could broadcast signals across the globe using just a credit-card-sized computer and a handful of components? It might sound like a scene from a sci-fi novel, but with a Raspberry Pi and ...