Raspberry Pi enthusiasts looking to expand the power of their Raspberry Pi mini PC may be interested in the Raspberry Pi Cluster HAT. The Cluster HAT add-on board has been designed to attach to the ...
For enthusiasts and professionals working with the latest Raspberry Pi 5, managing power sources and cables can be a hassle, especially when setting up multiple units or working in areas with limited ...
It was announced at the beginning of March, but now the Raspberry Pi Power over Ethernet (PoE) hat is out. Thanks to the addition of a new 4-pin header on the Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+, the Pis can get ...
Raspberry Pi devices are incredibly useful and can be augmented with additional technology to make them fit for numerous use cases. Back in 2018, the Raspberry Pi team announced a Hardware Attached on ...
Raspberry Pi has launched a new product that would make it easier to build robots out of LEGO components. The Build HAT (or Hardware Attached on Top), as it is called, is an add-on device that plugs ...
Raspberry Pi describes the BUILD HAT project to be an exciting collaboration with LEGO Education. The said creation would boost the impact of STEAM learning. The team behind this development targets ...
The Raspberry Pi 5 is the first member of the Raspberry Pi family to support PCIe NVMe SSDs. But since it doesn’t have a built-in M.2 connector, you need to rely on a HAT (Hardware Attached on Top) ...
The Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ is an add-on board for connecting M.2 M-key compatible devices to the Raspberry Pi 5. It has a data transfer speed of up to 500MB/s and costs $12 (approximately 1,880 yen). M ...
I personally am not a fan of the laminate-type acrylic cases. I bought one from "smraza" and one of the inner bits on one of the layers snapped right off just from disassembling it. That probably ...
The inspiration for this post (and this project) came from something that I recently read in the Raspberry Pi blog. I would like to start out by saying if you are interested in computers, programming, ...
Last week I used every Raspberry Pi that I had to build a six-node HexaPi computing cluster. Since then I have been asked a number of times: what is it good for? So I'm going to take a look at the ...