Carl Monk has taken a model A+ and a Unicorn HAT add-on board and created a clock which tells the time in plain English. It does this by lighting up the Neopixels on the HAT in a specific pattern to illuminate the words, which have simply been printed onto a piece of paper. Very nice use of the Unicorn and well worth taking a look at. Read how he did it here.
David Hooker has taken an old Atari Lynx handheld computer, ripped the guts out of it and fitted a Raspberry Pi along with a bunch of other electronic components (an amplifier for instance). He’s installed Shea Silverman’s PiPlay and used one of those car reversing screens as a display. Read about his build, and how to replicate it, here.
Richard Saville (aka The Average Man) has created a new prototyping board for use with the A+/B+. It’s called the ProtoPal and it plugs into the 40-pin +-sized GPIO pins. It has plenty of prototyping space and has two long power rails running along the centre of the board. Richard has designed the board to give you the maximum amount of prototyping space so it doesn’t use the 4 mounting holes of the A+/B+. Instead it has one hole through which you can push a spacer which helps further balance the board. I’ve got one ready to have a play with so expect to hear more about the ProtoPal soon. You can read more about the board on Richard’s blog.
“seeourfamilytravels” (actual name unknown) has taken a Pi and shrouded it in a chassis that looks like an old-fashioned police van. Details of his build are here and you can view a video of the project above.