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The Raspberry Pi 5 is a single-board computer about the size of a credit card. But like most Raspberry Pi devices, you can do even more with it if you’re willing to plug in an add-on or two. So while ...
Raspberry Pi has unveiled the RMC20452T, its debut radio module designed to provide easy-to-integrate Wi-Fi and Bluetooth ...
Raspberry Pi has released a new radio module, and industrial players navigating the complexities of wireless connectivity should take note. The UK-based foundation is now selling ...
Raspberry Pi goes on to say that the module features "1x1 single-band 2.4GHz Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n)" alongside Bluetooth 5.2, and you can use both Bluetooth Classic and Bluetooth Low Energy on it. So, if ...
You can read more about this in the datasheet from Trinamic. Because the TMC2209 uses one shared pin for transmit and receive in the UART communication line, the Raspberry Pi also receives what it ...
The Raspberry Pi RP2350 microcontroller is generally available, meaning the chip can now be picked up from resellers rather than as a Pico 2 or on PCBs from manufacturers like JLC. It was launched ...
Boardcon Compact3588S SBC is another Raspberry Pi 5 alternative powered by a Rockchip RK3588S octa-core Cortex-A76/A55 SoC with a 6 TOP NPU for AI acceleration, up to 16GB RAM, up to 256GB eMMC flash, ...
Please consider looking into adding platform support for the new RP2350 MCU and the Raspberry Pi Pico 2 development board. RP2350 is the successor and next-generation of RPi RP2040 so guess would n ...
The Pi 5 is significantly faster, and has potential AI uses, while the Pi 4 has more varied video out options and low power usage.
New users of the Raspberry Pi are always faced with the question of what can be done with the popular single-board computer. These are the most exciting beginner projects for getting started.
These in-depth Raspberry Pi 5 benchmarks provide more insight into the mini PCs performance and compare it to the older Raspberry Pi 4 system ...
Unlock your setup's full potential by learning how to use the Raspberry Pi GPIO pins and making literally anything out of them!