The National Trust’s Bodiam Castle and creative agency Splash and Ripple have collaborated on a new interactive experience. The experience, which takes the form of an interactive murder mystery, uses devices called ‘Echo Horns’ carried by the visitors to tell the story of the mystery, as well as educate visitors on historical events. The Echo Horns carry a Raspberry Pi and some RFID wizardry and allow visitors to choose their own story by following clues. You can read more about the project over on the Raspberry Pi Foundation blog.
Lothian schools in Raspberry Pi giveaway
Scottish pupils in Lothian aged between 12 and 15 may be able to get hold of a free Raspberry Pi on the 1st December thanks to Young Scot. All they need to do is go onto the Young Scot website from 12 noon and sign-up for a chance. Applications are open for two weeks and there are 500 Pis up for grabs. Read more here.
Resources that will help the kids get started with their Pi are available here.
Run ASP.NET on the Raspberry Pi with Mono and OWIN
Jan Tielens has written up his procedure for installing and using Mono on the Raspberry Pi, giving you a low-power ASP.NET platform. He uses Arch Linux as the operating system, so you may want to decide if it’s right for you. Read his tutorial here.
Christmas Tree kit for the Raspberry Pi
Tom Stratford backed Andrew Gale’s recent Kickstarter for a GPIO Christmas Tree. He’s now got it and he’s posted up a short build review over on his blog. Read it here. If you’d like to get hold of your own Christmas tree and solder it up, head on over to PocketMoneyTronics.
FLIRC – a new case for the Raspberry Pi
The Pi Hut and FLIRC have just launched a new case for the Raspberry Pi Model B+. I was lucky enough to be given one to review, so here’s my take on this latest entry to the market.
The FLIRC case is primarily made of cast aluminium and, at £13 (inc VAT), it’s the cheapest metal case out there. The aluminium surrounds the Pi on five sides with only the bottom open. The plastic used on the bottom, and as a cap for the top, is of good quality and when fixed together with the enclosed screws, the whole thing feels very solid with no rattle. Inside the case, the aluminium has been extruded so that there is a block that descends to the CPU and, when you use the enclosed thermal pad it acts as a heat-sink.
All the ports are easily accessible, although the thickness of the case at the USB ports may make using some wider dongles difficult. This is a very minor thing, though, and the quality of the case more than makes up for this. The bottom of the case (the plastic part) has a slot for the micro SD card so you don’t need to disassemble the case to access it – it’s quite tricky to press the card and extract it though. This might be a good thing in most cases, though, as it means you won’t accidentally eject it. The bottom has slits cut into it for ventilation and rubber feet lift the whole case up slightly to allow air flow. There is also a slot in the bottom to allow a ribbon cable to come out. There is a slight issue here as a full 40-pin ribbon cable can’t be inserted as the pillars of the internal structure of the case get in the way.
As a case for developing with electronics, therefore, it’s probably not the first choice. However, as a stylish case to hold your Pi, for instance as a media centre or for programming without the GPIO, it’s hard to argue with the quality on offer. And that’s where this case really wins out – the quality of the aluminium and the smooth design aesthetics really hold it head-and-shoulders above other cases on the “coolness” scale.
Rating: 8/10
You can buy a FLIRC case from The Pi Hut here.
Alex Eames over at RasPi.TV has also reviewed the case and done a video walk-round.
Pushing the Raspberry Pi A+ to the limits
Over at Philtopia, Phil has been seeing what the Model A+ can do. He’s installed MAME and tried out various games and also tried (successfully) to watch full HD videos from YouTube. It’s really reassuring how far 256MB of RAM can get you. Read more here.