Maker and Thingiverse member Dimwit-Dave has created an awesome Raspberry Pi Zero WiFi Camera which includes a 3D printer case that he has uploaded to Thingiverse together with full instructions and ...
When I bought the Raspberry Pi kit from Amazon, I decided not to get one of the very inexpensive cases that came with some of the kits. My reasoning was that, since I have a 3D printer, I'd make my ...
An electronics hacker known as befinitiv recently posted a YouTube video demonstrating how he converted an old Cosina Hi-Lite 35-mm film camera into a digital snapper, using 3D printing, a Raspberry ...
Raspberry Pi enthusiasts that have access to a 3D printer and are looking for a neat way to be able to protect their pocket sized Raspberry Pi Zero mini PC, may be interested in this new one-piece ...
February 11, 2017 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google Polaroids are great, but if you want to make your own weird version, Hackaday user Muth has a guide that links ...
HomeKit app developer Matt Hochgatterer today has unveiled an open-source HomeKit camera project. The HKCam utilizes a Raspberry Pi Zero W and a 3D printed enclosure to allow users to create their own ...
Etch-A-Snap — A Raspberry Pi powered Etch-A-Sketch Camera Imagine a Raspberry Pi Zero camera, 3D printed parts, some computer code and a serious dose of childhood nostalgia concocted together and you ...
Last May the Raspberry Pi Foundation announced the Pi Zero (v1.3), with a camera connector. Thanks to the good people at Pi-Shop.ch, I was fortunate enough to get one in the first week after the ...
Date notwithstanding, it’s your lucky day as Elliot and Dan get together to review the best hacks of the week. For some reason, film photography was much on our writers’ minds this week, as we talked ...
You can make a lot of cool things by stuffing a Raspberry Pi computer into an existing chassis. We’ve seen hackers do everything from turn an old portable DVD player into a modern Kodi-powered media ...
Instant cameras have come a long way since the days of the emulsion prints of Polaroid. Take for example, Impossible Project’s new I–1 camera, a sleek instant camera controlled by an accompanying ...