Install Chromium 45 on Jessie on the Raspberry Pi 2

Conor O’Neill has found out that the Ubuntu developers have been continuing to build Pi-compatible versions of desktop browser Chromium. He has documented a way to install it on the new Jessie version of Raspbian on his website. As he points out in his post, this newer version of Chromium gives you access to most of the apps and extensions in the Chrome Web Store, including the Espruino Chrome App so you can programme that little device direct from the Pi. Read the instructions here.

Gorgeous Game Boy clone made using a Raspberry Pi 2

Cristov wanted an authentic 80s gameplay experience and so set about creating a Game Boy clone. He used a Raspberry Pi, three custom circuit boards, a 3.5″ TFT screen and actual Game Boy parts for the controls. You can see more pictures of the device here and he’s working on a documented method for reproducing it (although you’ll need a 3D printer to produce the case!)

Make your own Netflix-enabling button

So you want to watch Netflix on the television, dim your lights and order pizza at the same time? At the push of a button? Well, now you can with this nifty project that’s been put up on the Netflix Make It website. They used a LIPO-powered Particle Core microcontroller (which has built-in wi-fi) to accept the button input and then transmit it to a Raspberry Pi which controls the relevant appliances and follow-on actions. Take a look at the how-to on their website.

Raspberry Pi-controlled air pollution art project erected in Chelmsford

high chelmer

Victoria Button has just seen the completion of the installation of her art project at a shopping centre in Chelmsford. The project, which is at the High Chelmer shopping centre, seeks to highlight the issue of air pollution in our environment and encourage social change. It reads pollution levels from various locations via a council API and then uses that data to determine lighting effects at the installation location. The 12 Raspberry Pi-controlled DMX lights project through four ‘leaves’ made out of squashed plastic bottles and changes throughout the day. The installation is up until the end of October.

You can find out much more by viewing the video of Victoria’s talk at the last Cambridge Raspberry Jam: