If you have a cheap laptop and you realize you can’t connect a second monitor to it, what do you do? Well, if you are [Pierre Couy], you grab a Raspberry Pi and put together a virtual screen solution.
All you need to do is add a Z-Wave USB stick to your Raspberry Pi, and you expand the compatible device list drastically.
The Raspberry Pi always attracts compatible third-party hardware and its new keyboard computer, the Raspberry Pi 400, is now available with touchscreen displays to make a complete system. The ...
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, ...
Since the Raspberry Pi arrived back in 2012, we’ve seen no end of interesting and creative designs for portable versions of the little computer. They often have problems in interfacing with their ...
Those premium features include a mechanical keyboard with user-replaceable keycaps and RGB backlit keys. And while it has the same quad-core ARM Cortex-A76 processor as the Raspberry Pi 500, the new ...