While the Raspberry Pi has very good support for an I2C bus, a lot of very cool chips – including the in system programmer for just about every ATtiny and ATmega microcontroller – use an SPI bus.
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You too can track your Counter-Strike 2 kills with this Raspberry Pi Pico-powered project
If you're deep in the world of competitive FPS games, there's a good chance you're very conscious about how many kills you ...
No doubt many Hackaday readers will have tried their hand at home brewing. It’s easy enough, you can start with a can of hopped malt extract and a bag of sugar in a large bucket in your kitchen and ...
Build a voice assistant on Raspberry Pi using ElevenLabs and Open Meteo, so you get live forecasts hands free.
In winter, it’s important to ventilate living and working spaces regularly. Here’s how to make a homemade measuring station ...
The Raspberry Pi might sound like dessert, but it's actually a credit card–sized computer changing the world of DIY tech. First launched in 2012 by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, it was designed to make ...
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