Coming up in a few weeks time, Bethanie Fentiman is running a Raspberry Jam in Sittingbourne, Kent. There will be a mixture of drop-in activities and workshops including Sonic Pi, physical computing and Minecraft. Sounds like a great, informal event. It’s being held at Ideas Test on the High Street from 11am-3pm on Saturday, 10th December, so if you’re in the area, go along and learn something new or share your experience! Tickets are free and are available here.
Baltimore Raspberry Jam – 3rd December
The Digital Harbor Foundation are running a Raspberry Jam on Saturday, 3rd December at their tech center on Light Street in Baltimore. The event runs from 10am-4pm and looks to be a mix of show-and-tell and free-form hacking. Get your free tickets here.
Download BBC programmes via get_iplayer on the Raspberry Pi
get_iplayer is a set of scripts that can be used to download BBC iPlayer content for offline viewing. Recently, Alex Eames over at RasPi.TV noticed that something was amiss and that the scripts no longer worked. Well, he has now come up with a solution to the problem and get_iplayer works again, but only if you follow his instructions which are available on his site.
MozFest 2016 – one Space Wrangler’s view of Raspberry Pi fun/madness
Andrew Mulholland was a Space Wrangler for the YouthZone this year at MozFest, the massive London-based get-together for people hoping to make their way in the tech world, and the Internet in particular. He has now, after the dust has settled and his feet/brain have recovered, written up his account of the way things happened. It certainly seems like a fantastic event and it’s great to hear what happened from Andrew’s perspective. Read all about it here.
New crowdfunding campaign for a Raspberry Pi-powered, hobbyists’ alarm system
Zach and Jake are two 16-year olds who are starting up a company called MakeTronix. To launch their company, they are running an IndieGoGo campaign to raise funds to produce the MakeTronix Alarm. It is a hobbyists’ alarm system featuring a GPIO plugin board featuring 11 buttons, a red LED and a buzzer. Also included is a PIR sensor and some jumper wires to attach the sensor to the main board. The team’s plan is to create tutorials and lesson plans around the board for educational value. The board sells for £11 (earlybird) rising to £12 plus shipping on IndieGoGo. They’re aiming to sell at least 100 of them to reach their funding goal of £1200.
Zach’s hopefully sending me a board to look at very soon and I’ll report back on what I think of it. 🙂
Sega Genesis gets a Raspberry Pi 3 upgrade
Michael Lyons from Florida has taken a second-hand Radica Sega Genesis system (which he bought off eBay for a dollar), prised it apart, removed the innards and replaced them with a Raspberry Pi 3. And all in one sitting! He’s recorded himself doing it and you can see the process in the video above.