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Experience the future of home automation with Apollo Automation. Our solutions, compatible with Home Assistant, are designed to cater to your unique household needs.
Take back your CarThing.
First Mac mini redesign in almost 15 years highlights how good the insides are.
How I built a transit dashboard with Rust, Skia, and an old Kindle
Spectra is a JavaScript-based hackable smartwatch based on the ESP32-S3 WiFi and Bluetooth microcontroller that aims to offer the quality of high-end
The WiPhone is an open source Arduino-compatible phone capable of making free calls over WiFi.
Under Design is a small creative agency based in Philadelphia. This is our blog.
This tutorial will show you how to use Viam to make an LED blink with a Raspberry Pi. This is a great place to start if you have never built a robot or a circuit before. There should have been a video here but your browser does not seem to support it. There should have been a video here but your browser does not seem to support it. First, you’ll use the control interface on Viam to turn the LED on and off.
How to flash an SD card for Raspiberry Pi Zero W, with an OS image, set a WiFI password, and enable SSH
Learn how to set up your Pico, ready for Pimoroni addons – Pimoroni Learning Portal
In case you haven’t heard, about a month ago MicroPython has celebrated its 11th birthday. I was lucky that I was able to start hacking with it soon after pyboards have shipped – the fi…
The BenQ RD280U pairs a 28.2" 4K+ display, 3:2 ratio, Nano Matte Panel, Coding Modes, MoonHalo backlight, and KVM with Eye-Care for effortless coding sessions.
Amiga and Retro Computers shop - We Ship Worldwide!
Last week, I went on an adventure through the electromagnetic spectrum!
A comfy keyboard, weird trackpad, blah webcam, and notably mature Linux desktop.
It’s yellow. It fits in your pocket. There’s a crank. It comes with 24 free games to get you started. Say hi to Playdate from Panic.
Welcome to the Checkmate IPS Retro Monitor, a hand built, customisable display. A user friendly classic that meets your needs both now and in the future. What we’ve built here is less of a standalone monitor and more of a custom, modular display platform to take us all into the future of retro computing and gaming.
When you combine electronics with computers you can make some fantastic projects. In these pages I’ll show you how to use and program small, single board computers which allow you to control and monitor real world electronics. Build colourful lighting effects, motorised, intelligent buggies, handheld games, computer controlled robots. The limit is your imagination.
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