The Raspberry Pi 400 was a hit when it came out in 2020, harkening back to the days when people would stuff a whole computer under the gigantic keys of an old-fashioned keyboard. If you love that form ...
For a computer with no screen, the Raspberry Pi sure managed to make a splash. Now we get to more easily see what the Raspberry Pi is actually up to. Today, the company that sells the tiny devices ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 gains the performance improvements of the new Raspberry Pi 5 microcomputer. The Raspberry Pi 500 gains the performance improvements of the new Raspberry Pi 5 microcomputer. is a ...
It started as a smart home tool; now I want it to do everything.
Raspberry Pi 500 is a versatile mini-PC packed with powerful hardware for tinkerers. The new Raspberry Pi monitor complements ...
When the Raspberry Pi Foundation launched the Raspberry Pi 400 in 2020, which also happened to be the foundation's first-ever keyboard computer, it gave us all a throwback to the Commodore 64 and the ...
The Raspberry Pi 400 is a computer stuffed inside a keyboard, featuring a quad-core ARM Cortex-A72 processor, 4GB of RAM, WiFi, Bluetooth, and a starting price of $70 for the computer alone or $100 ...
The newly released Raspberry Pi 5 requires a 27W USB-C power supply to function properly. While some users have reported that the power supply of the previous model, Raspberry Pi 4, is sufficient, ...
One of the selling points of the Raspberry Pi 5 (released in October 2023) is that it was fast enough and had enough memory to be a credible general-purpose desktop PC, if not an especially fast one.
Rasberry Pi enthusiast and case maker Tom Murray, responsible for creating the SmartiPi range of cases which accommodates not only the Raspberry Pi mini PC but also the official 7 inch display.
If you would like to monitor the traffic on your home network or are thinking of exploring deeper into the world of network management. You might be pleased to know that building a Raspberry Pi SNMP ...
I'm just biding my time until they announce a Compute Module 5. I'd hope it was backward compatible, but ultimately, I don't care. I just want a CM5! The CM4 has been overwhelmingly a better fit for ...