Pete Taylor has extended his Holga camera project by using a script by Steven Kay to convert images into ASCII art. You can see Pete’s modified version of the script here.
Light bar for Raspberry Pi, Arduino etc
Paul Brown of MyPiFi.net has been running Kickstarters for a while now. First of all he did a simple LED-and-button board and then moved onto a plugin board to run an LCD screen. This time, he has created a generic Light Bar Board with 10 LEDs and resistors that can be switched on or off by the device that you connect to the provided headers. The earlybirds have all gone, but you can still pick the board up for £6, which is a bargain. It’s especially useful for all those projects that require LEDs when you just can’t be bothered to wire it all up on breadboard or stripboard! Take a look at the Kickstarter here.
Beat the Buzzer with the Raspberry Pi
Dave Patterson and his primary school class have constructed a beat-the-buzzer game for their local school Christmas fair. It uses an expansion board from ModMyPi to protect the Pi from static electricity and Dave has programmed the whole thing in Python, using PyGame to play sounds at the appropriate time. There’s only a video of it so far, but it’s so much fun that I thought I’d blog it. Here we go:
The Raspberry Pi – bringing programming back
PiBorg launch new Raspberry Pi-powered robot
Cambridgeshire-based PiBorg have just announced a new product.
Say hello to the Diddyborg – Doodleborg’s younger brother. Here’s a picture of Doodleborg for comparison:
Here are some of the specs of the Diddyborg from their site.
- Chassis: Robust Laser cut 3mm Cast Acrylic Perspex™ in Black or Clear
- Motors: Six 1:71 (60rpm) metal gear 6V 220mA motors
- PicoBorg Reverse: Powerful two axis 5Amp motor controller
- BattBorg: Gets the most out of your batteries without needing a USB supply
- Full Build instructions: Detailed step by step instructions anyone can use
- Code library and example scripts: Simple to use software such as ball following
I’ve seen Diddyborg in the flesh at a recent Jam (Potton Pi & Pints) and it’s really cute. Stunningly well-made with excellent kit onboard.
The price is quite steep at £180, but once you take into account the sheer amount of kit, the quality of the motors and the included software, I think it’s about right for what is supposed to be a premium product.
Here it is in action:
The Raspberry Pi Family – a virtual museum-in-the-making
Alex Eames from RasPi.TV has collected together all the variants of Raspberry Pi he owns and done a nifty review of the differences and features of each. Take a look here. I’m amazed to say I’ve got the only one he hasn’t: a Rev 2 Model B with 256MB of RAM.