Raspberry Pi magazine The MagPi – issue 45 out now

Thursday saw the publication of the newest issue of the Raspberry Pi Foundation’s magazine The MagPi. This month there is a special feature on the new Raspberry Pi camera module as well as lots of articles from the community. It’s especially nice to see Dr Lucy Rogers’ dinosaur robotics work at Blackgang Chine get some love. You can download and/or subscribe to the magazine here.

View and analyze the Astro Pi data in your web browser

Jamie Bailey from Initial State has been in contact. They have taken the data from Ed and Izzy, the two AstroPi units on the International Space Station, and imported it into their Internet of Things platform. They have made the entire graphing display available publicly so you can see what a vast amount of data has been collected. Read more and view the data/graphs here.

SIMON – 80’s classic physical gaming with a Raspberry Pi

In 1980s, SIMON was all the rage. SIMON was a memory game in which segments of a circle lit up a particular colour in a particular sequence. The player then had to reproduce the exact same sequence to progress with the game. Les Pounder has taken a Raspberry Pi and a bunch of components from CPC (bet you couldn’t guess that) and put them together in a large box to make a very blinky version of the same game. You can read how to build it yourself, and program it using gpiozero (and some other libraries) here. If you want to do it on a smaller scale, you could do it with some illuminated momentary push buttons!

You can see a demo video of it working below:

String Art machine creates beautiful masterpieces with a Raspberry Pi

London-based Laarco have developed a machine to create large works of art using a technique known as “String Art”. This technique uses thousands of nails and a single piece of string to construct a ‘painting’ of a subject. Laarco’s machine, called “Autograph”, uses a Raspberry Pi at it’s core which sends commands to an Arduino Mega fitted with a 3D-printing shield which controls the mechanism. The results are astounding as you can see from the time-lapse video above. You can even buy a piece from Laarco for upwards of £700/$1100 (approx).