We have featured a number of different cameras projects here on Geeky Gadgets but this new build by Hackaday.io member Muth is the first Raspberry Pi instant camera we have seen created. Check out the ...
A Printables member used a Raspberry Pi Zero W and thermal printer to create a Polaroid-style camera. The camera has a green knob/button for taking photos, image preview screen, and LED lights. Parts ...
Raspberry Pi enthusiast Dan Macnish has created a fantastic Raspberry Pi instant camera that not only captures an image but transforms your photos into line drawn cartoons. The camera is a mash up of ...
The latest modding project by Nico Rahardian Tangara aims to bring the charm of a Polaroid instant camera into the digital age, Tom’s Hardware reported. To achieve this, the enthusiast combines a ...
Raspberry Pi, the company that sells tiny, cheap, single-board computers, is releasing an add-on that is going to open up several use cases — and yes, because it’s 2024, there’s an AI angle. Called ...
Raspberry Pi has just introduced a new camera module in the high-quality camera format. For the same $50 price you would shell out for the HQ camera, you get roughly eight times fewer pixels. But this ...
The latest Raspberry Pi OS version adds menu search, a more mainstream network and VPN manager, and plenty of camera and machine learning possibilities through a new open source camera package. None ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has announced a new camera board that should dramatically improve the photographic capabilities available to the popular DIY computer’s enthusiasts and hobbyists. It’s ...
Though Apple's HomeKit home automation platform has supported cameras for over a year, manufacturers have been slow to bring compatible devices to market. Learn how you can create your own HomeKit ...
Attention tinkerers: Raspberry Pi has released a new camera for its tiny single-board computers. The “Raspberry Pi High Quality Camera” is on sale now for $50, and it will be sold alongside the older ...
Raspberry Pi 4 (with USB 3.0) and Intel RealSense D415 depth sensing camera. When the Raspberry Pi 4 came out, [Frank Zhao] saw the potential to make a realtime 3D scanner that was completely handheld ...