If you would like to learn more about electronics and learn to program you might be interested in a new project for a Raspberry Pi powered Pip educational handheld which as expected has this week ...
The Pip Kickstarter campaign is a little over a week old and it is now within touching distance of being a success. With 20 days to go and having achieved funding of over £27,000, the goal of £30,000 ...
A new Kickstarter campaign will be launching soon to help those interested learn more about electronics and programming and takes the form of a Raspberry Pi powered handheld games and coding system ...
I’m a regular contributor to Stuff magazine and Stuff.tv, covering apps, games, Apple kit, Android, Lego, retro gaming and other interesting oddities. I also pen opinion pieces when the editor lets me ...
As every child hacker knows, even if you can convince your parents to buy you a Switch, and you can find one in stock, the prospect of homebrew software on a Switch is still a ways off. At the heart ...
If you've got a 3D printer, a Raspberry Pi, and just a little bit of technical know-how, you can make some truly spectacular projects.
Pip, from Glasgow’s Curious Chip, is a novel take on teaching kids to code. For starters, much like the Nintendo Switch, it works when you’re out and about, and when you’re sat at a desk.
Ryan Grieve used the Raspberry Pi mini-computer to make a functioning Pip-Boy 3000 and has documented the process of creating the Raspberry Pip-Boy on his blog. "The idea was simple enough," he writes ...
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