Raspberry Pi has introduced a new version of its tiny wireless Zero W board, the Zero 2 W, with much improved performance, added features and a slightly higher $15 price tag. It uses a mildly ...
The new Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W costs just $15/£13, but is equipped with a Broadcom BCM2710A1 SOC which gives you a 1GHz quad-core 64-bit ARM Cortex-A53 CPU and 512MB RAM. The W indicates that it has Wi ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. (Photo: Raspberry Pi Foundation) Earlier this month, ...
The new Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W is a tiny, inexpensive computer with built-in support for WiFi, Bluetooth and a 1 GHz BCM2710A ARM Cortex-A53 quad-core processor that delivers about 5X the performance ...
Pi-hole is well-known in the self-hosting and privacy communities, but many people assume it requires powerful hardware to run correctly. After looking at how little CPU and RAM Pi-hole actually uses, ...
Raspberry Pi's entire business is releasing tiny, low-cost computers, but at one point several years ago, the company decided it could go lower than the $30-$35 price tags we've seen for many of its ...
Open Printer: open-source, repairable inkjet using Raspberry Pi Zero W. Modular design: inspect, replace parts, refill cartridges; no DRM or proprietary drivers. Prints sheets or paper rolls with ...
The Raspberry Pi company is best known for its main eponymous product line, now in its fourth incarnation (and also getting a little pricier, at least temporarily). But there are all sorts of ...
The Raspberry Pi Zero (and its Zero W counterpart with wireless connectivity) are minuscule single-board computers that have various uses for coders and “makers” out there. The $5 price tag for the ...
The diminutive Raspberry Pi Zero is getting its first upgrade in nearly five years. Today, Raspberry Pi founder Eben Upton announced the Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W, a new $15 product that puts the ...
As single board computers have become ever smaller and more powerful, so have those experimenting with them tried to push the boundaries of the machines they can be used in. First we had cyberdecks, ...
Those who have children of their own might argue that the youth of today are getting far too much internet time. [Nick] decided to put an emergency stop to it and made this ingenious internet kill ...