New LEGO-compatible case for the Raspberry Pi touch screen launched on Kickstarter

Tom Murray, who launched the LEGO-compatible SmartiPi case in October 2014, has just launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise money for a case for the official touch screen for the Raspberry Pi. The new case, which will be injection moulded, includes an adjustable stand and looks to be a very well put-together design. So, if you’ve got a touch screen, take a look at the Kickstarter. The case starts at $20 USD (shipping is free in the USA and a very competitive $7 for the UK) and includes a case and mount for the official Pi camera.

Word clock with a Raspberry Pi Zero

Nice to see projects being built with the Zero now.

David Saul set himself a project over Christmas: a ‘word clock’. For this, he used a Raspberry Pi Zero and a MAX7219 chip. A ‘word clock’ is a clock made up out of a ‘crossword’ of words under which lights are placed to illuminate the correct columns and rows necessary to give a readout of the time. You can see the results of his work, including some detail of how he did it here.

A Raspberry Pi Christmas tree on a lubricating tram

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Jiří Zemánek and Martin Gurtner were asked by journalists from technological on-line magazine Technet to place a remote-controlled Christmas tree on-board a tram that lubricates the tracks around Prague. To control the lights, they used a Raspberry Pi to run a string of addressable WS2811 LEDs. The algorithm to produce the light pattern (which is very complicated) was open to modification by website users who could send their own ‘wave’ to interact with the programmed ‘wave’. You can read more here.

Magic Mirror uses Raspberry Pi and widgets

Dylan Pierce has created a ‘magic mirror’ for his girlfriend. As well as showing a reflection, it also displays various widgets such as the time, weather etc. The whole thing is powered by a Raspberry Pi which is projected through ‘two way glass’ using a standard monitor. Read all about it here. He uses Chromium in kiosk mode and has uploaded all his code to Github so, if you wanted to, you can reproduce this rather nifty hack.