News

The Raspberry Pi Foundation is already taking the mount system to the extreme with a picture of a beefy telephoto zoom lens—what looks to be a Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM—that ...
Pinefeat has designed an EF/EF-S lens controller and adapter for the Raspberry Pi HQ Camera, compatible with Canon lenses, ...
The camera’s aesthetic design is on the chunky side, probably because of the choice of a Pi 4 rather than a Pi Zero. It remains very usable though, and produces photographs with a distinctive feel.
The Pi HQ wide-angle lens costs $25 and has a 3MP resolution with a 6mm focal length and F1.2 aperture. The lenses are required for the Pi HQ Camera to take photos and video.
This camera module uses IMX477, a 12.3 megapixel sensor manufactured by Sony, and can be equipped with C-mount and CS-mount camera lenses. New product: Raspberry Pi High Quality Camera on sale now ...
The new Raspberry Pi High Quality Camera supports interchangeable lenses and costs just $50. It’s built around a 12.3-megapixel Sony IMX477 sensor and has a CS mount.
But instead of a lens, the Raspberry Pi Camera has a huge cover, which looks like a nose of a star-nosed mole. For the viewfinder, Bjørn Karmann has utilized a screen where you can adjust the ...
The lenses are generally made to hit a bigger sensor, too. That means the Pi camera gets a cropped view of what a DSLR would with the same lens. Is it practical? We don’t know what we’d use it ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has today announced a new 12.3 megapixel camera module that supports CS-mount and C-mount interchangeable lenses, or pretty much any back-focus lens via a third party ...
For instance, a lens with a 50mm focal length on a full-frame camera will have a different field of view when used on a camera with a smaller sensor, like the Raspberry Pi HQ camera.
Even if you don’t fancy yourself a coder or maker, Raspberry Pi’s tiny, dirt cheap computers offer a great entry point into that world. Just $35 will get you the essential guts for a fully ...
Resellers will be offering a couple of lens options for the new Raspberry Pi camera: a 6mm CS‑mount lens for $25 and a 16mm C-mount lens for $50. However, you don’t need to buy those lenses if ...