Hi everyone. I’m taking a few days off from blogging over the Christmas period to be with my family and get a bit de-screened! I’d like to take this opportunity to wish you a very Merry Christmas. Be happy, be kind and be blessed. And don’t drink and drive – be safe! 🙂
Make a stringed instrument with the Raspberry Pi
Instructables user TakTik02 has developed a musical instrument using the Raspberry Pi, some electric cords, a winder and some polystyrene. Together with some other small components, he’s used an MCP3008 to convert the analog signal for the Pi. Take a look here.
Animated elf-on-a-shelf using a Dexter Industries servo board and a Raspberry Pi
The folks over at Dexter Industries have taken an elf-on-a-shelf, their PivotPi servo controller board, a servo and an ultrasonic distance sensor and built an animated elf that reacts and waves when someone approaches it. It’s very cute and you can read how they did it here.
New issue of Raspberry Pi’s The MagPi is out with a live booting Raspbian/PIXEL DVD!
This month’s MagPi (issue 53) is out with all the regular projects, news and reviews you’ve come to expect. There’s a cover disc (DVD) containing the new x86 version of Raspbian/PIXEL for you to use on your home computer (this can also be downloaded as an ISO image). The issue’s main feature is a “get into coding” guide (which is entirely appropriate for the Christmas issue as lots of new people will be getting Pis). You can find out more and download it electronically here and if you’d like a print copy (highly recommended), you can buy one from The Pi Hut or good newsagents.
Raspbian desktop now available for x86 – run PIXEL on your PC/Mac
The folks over at Raspberry Pi have just announced that PIXEL/Raspbian is now available for x86 machines. This means that you can now run the new desktop environment on a regular PC or Mac. You can download it here as a live-booting ISO image. It will also be available tomorrow on the front of The MagPi, so if you want to wait until you have physical media in your hands, you can! The only things it doesn’t include are Mathematica and Minecraft Pi Edition (for reasons of licencing). So, if you want a unified experience across all your machines, this is the way to go!
Cosmetics case revealed to be a Raspberry Pi pen-testing kit
Naomi Wu, aka SexyCyborg, has created a fabulous cosmetics case which conceals within it a penetration test kit driven by a Raspberry Pi running Kali Linux. Called the Pi Palette, it is a 3D-printed (rather large) box which looks to start with like a container for make-up. The make-up tray, however, lifts out and reveals a keyboard. The cosmetics ‘mirror’ turns out to be a rather nifty hidden screen. It’s a cool project, although she does admit it’s a bit bulky and really is just a bit of fun.
WARNING: If you click around long enough on Naomi’s feed, you’ll find some not-safe-for-work/young-eyes pictures. If you’re not mature enough to handle that, I wouldn’t bother!
You can read more and see more photos (including a full build-log) over on Imgur and see a video of it in action below. The bill-of-materials and STL files can be found here.