
Raspberry Pi Site: Raspberry Pi Projects Home • My Setup • Resources • News • Projects/Code • FAQs • Contact Raspberry Pi Projects Various projects, some ours, some others... Our Coding, Scripts and Software Primarily projects that are coding only, rather than interfacing to built electronic circuits. Dweeber's Github Dweeber is the userid I use for various public forums and coding related to the Raspberry Pi. https:www.github.com/dweeber Our Hardware Projects Projects where we are building hardware and then using it. FAQs and HowTos FAQs for various different things. Coding Project Resources GPIO Libraries (PERL!) Cool Projects that Others are doing Private Project Areas Sections listed below are not open to the public. Back to top Another test
Projects - Rasberry Pi | eLinux.org Back to the Hub. Community Pages: Tutorials - a list of tutorials. Learn by doing. Guides - a list of informative guides. Projects - a list of community projects. Tasks - for advanced users to collaborate on software tasks. Datasheets - a frambozenier.org documentation project. Education - a place to share your group's project and find useful learning sites. Community - links to the community elsewhere on the web. Games - all kinds of computer games. Introduction This page contains a set of ongoing projects. The Raspberry Pi Forum has a list of Project Ideas & Links, to help people get started. Please add links to your projects (and ones you find interesting). Fill in each section: Project Title (as a link to the project webpage or connected wiki page) Project Description (including any additional links or information Skill Level/Ages it is aimed at (Any/Beginner/Intermediate/Advanced) Tags (Keywords related to the project, i.e. Community Project List
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Low-level peripherals - Rasberry Pi | eLinux.org Back to the Hub Hardware & Peripherals: Hardware - detailed information about the Raspberry Pi boards. Hardware History - guide to the Raspberry Pi models. Low-level Peripherals - using the GPIO and other connectors. Expansion Boards - GPIO plug-in boards providing additional functionality. Screens - attaching a screen to the Raspberry Pi. Cases - lots of nice cases to protect the Raspberry Pi. Other Peripherals - all sorts of peripherals used with the Raspberry Pi. Introduction In addition to the familiar USB, Ethernet and HDMI ports, the Raspberry Pi offers the ability to connect directly to a variety of electronic devices. Digital outputs: turn lights, motors, or other devices on or off Digital inputs: read an on or off state from a button, switch, or other sensor Communication with chips or modules using low-level protocols: SPI, I²C, or serial UART Connections are made using GPIO ("General Purpose Input/Output") pins. Note that no analogue input or output is available. Links Useful P2 pins:
ModMyPi case covers the $35 Raspberry Pi PC for about $13 The Rasbperry Pi is a full-fledged computer which you can buy for about $35. It has a processor, memory, USB and Ethernet ports. But one thing the RaspBerry Pi doesn’t have is a protective case. It’s basically a system-on-a-board and not much else. But a company called ModMyPi is taking pre-orders for a case designed to put some clothes on the Raspberry Pi Model B and make it look respectable. I suppose it will also help protect the little system from the elements a bit, while providing air vents for cooling. The ModMyI sells for £7.99 including VAT in the UK, or a little less than $13. The cases will start shipping April 5th. Geek.com reports that ModeMyPi will donate 5 percent of the proceeds from case sales to the Raspberry Pi Foundation. The company also sells Raspberry Pi Set-up Kits with an 8GB SD card loaded with Debian Linux, a wireless keyboard and mouse, USB hub, WiFi dongle, and other accessories for £64.99, which is a little over $100 US.
APC Good Ideas and Notebooks | evsc Where Good Ideas Come From On the flight back from Austria to Montreal I’ve read Steven Johnson’s Where Good Ideas Come From. I really like his work – i’ve read Mind Wide Open and Emergence before – because he manages to write easy-read and entertaining popular science books that at the same time give you tons of information and leave we with an enthusiasm for the topic. Where Good Ideas Come From shows how good ideas are not simple sparks suddenly popping into your mind, but complicated constructs that build on months or years of inputs coming from different conversations, readings, visits to the museum, events in your everyday life, tales told to you by your grandma, etc. They slowly take shape in your make, before one final trigger suddenly transforms them into a clearly graspable concept. Johnson shows and advocates how collaboration and interdisciplinarity are the most fertile grounds for new groundbreaking ideas. Erasmus Darwin’s commonplace book Commonplace book — mid 17th century
Raspberry Pwn: A pentesting release for the Raspberry Pi | Pwnie Express Pwnie Express is happy to announce the initial release of Raspberry Pwn! Security enthusiasts can now easily turn their Raspberry Pi into a full-featured security penetration testing and auditing platform! This fully open-source release includes the following testing tools: SET, Fasttrack, kismet, aircrack-ng, nmap, dsniff, netcat, nikto, xprobe, scapy, wireshark, tcpdump, ettercap, hping3, medusa, macchanger, nbtscan, john, ptunnel, p0f, ngrep, tcpflow, openvpn, iodine, httptunnel, cryptcat, sipsak, yersinia, smbclient, sslsniff, tcptraceroute, pbnj, netdiscover, netmask, udptunnel, dnstracer, sslscan, medusa, ipcalc, dnswalk, socat, onesixtyone, tinyproxy, dmitry, fcrackzip, ssldump, fping, ike-scan, gpsd, darkstat, swaks, arping, tcpreplay, sipcrack, proxychains, proxytunnel, siege, sqlmap, wapiti, skipfish, w3af Download your Raspberry Pwn here: Special thanks to @zenofex for letting us borrow his Pi. Enjoy! - The Pwnie Express Team
Setting Up Your Raspberry Pi For Headless Use With SSH The Raspberry Pi is – as we’ve seen in several previous articles – an extremely flexible piece of hardware. Once you’ve installed an operating system, got to grips with the small dimensions, and found a case for it, you’ll be able to install media centre software and perhaps even begin programming software (after all, that’s what it was designed for!). However, you might find that the business of plugging the Raspberry Pi into your big screen plasma TV – the only device in your house with a HDMI connection – is a bit tiresome while your family is watching their favourite show. Alternatively, you might have more than enough HDMI displays but not enough keyboards. Benefits of SSH Fortunately, the Raspberry Pi can accept SSH commands when connected to a local network (either by Ethernet or Wi-Fi), enabling you to easily set it up. Using the Pi as a NAS interface? This is where SSH comes in! Setting Up the Raspberry Pi for SSH Connecting to Your Raspberry Pi Issuing Remote Commands to the Pi ps ax
Credit card-sized Raspberry Pi computer gets a video cam! Just when you thought you can no longer squeeze anything else into the tiny Raspberry Pi computer, think again: the puny device is getting a video camera. A report on PC World said developers expect to make the HD camera available by early spring, though the camera's specifications have yet to be finalized. "The first cameras are expected to come with a 15-centimeter (just under 6 inches) flat cable and sell for around $25. The lens on the camera is similar to those found on many camera phones and is expected to provide 5 megapixels," PC World said. It quoted Raspberry Pi developers as saying the camera board is an alternative to using USB cameras with the Raspberry Pi. They said a camera board may give a better-quality resolution at a lower price, compared to USB-based counterparts. Raspberry Pi is a credit-card sized computer that plugs into a TV and a keyboard. While tiny, it can do many things a regular desktop PC does, including playing high-definition video. — TJD, GMA News
Raspberry Pi announces the Gertboard expansion board – Computer Chips & Hardware Technology When the Raspberry Pi $25 PC makes an appearance next year, it won’t be the only piece of hardware available to buy from the foundation’s online store. Today, it has been revealed the first expansion board for the tiny computer will also be available to purchase (if things go to plan). Expansion boards allow for additional functionality otherwise not possible with the standard PC board. In this case, the so-called Gertboard will add the option to play with flashing LEDs, hook your Raspberry Pi up to motors, and mess around with a range of sensors. A Raspberry Pi-powered robot, anyone? The board has been developed by Gert van Loo, another Broadcom employee just like Eben Upton. One thing to note in the image of the Gertboard above is the white rectangle printed on the board. With the announcement of the Gertboard, the Raspberry Pi changes from being just a cheap PC to a platform for experimentation. More at Raspberry Pi
Raspberry Pi, activist tool The tiny, $35, Linux-based Raspberry Pi computer has drawn a lot of attention in the last few months, and though it was originally developed to teach computer programming to young students, Internet activists have taken notice as well. A recent BBC interview with developer Nadim Kobeissi, creator of a web-based secure communications program called Cryptocat, shows off just one potential use of the low-cost hardware and free software system. Kobeissi says he's looking forward to the arrival of Raspberry Pi as a way to bring extra-secure communication to web chat, especially in places where conversations might be watched. Kobeissi's Cryptocat is an open-source program that encrypts chat conversations before they're sent to a server. Considering general privacy concerns and recent NSA surveillance probes, the idea could be intriguing for westerners too.