If you're a Raspberry Pi fan, perhaps you'll appreciate this little bit of history: the Camera Module was its first-ever accessory. With it, you can make security cameras and have all sorts of fun.
An off-the-shelf kit and about two hours are all you need.
Raspberry Pi launched a follow-up to its Camera Module 3 with the Camera Module 3 Sensor Assembly. Now, Raspberry Pi users can put the camera sensors into their own custom form factors. The move ...
Pironman 5 Pro Max is the latest Raspberry Pi 5 case by SunFounder. The new enclosure adds a 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen ...
What if your next AI assistant didn’t need the internet to answer your questions, generate images, or recognize objects? Imagine a compact, powerful device sitting on your desk, running advanced AI ...
There are now several official Raspberry Pi camera modules. The original 5-megapixel model was released in 2013, it was followed by an 8-megapixel Camera Module 2 which was released in 2016. The ...
Raspberry Pi, in collaboration with Sony Semiconductor Solutions Corporation, just launched an AI-powered camera module called the Raspberry Pi AI Camera. The module is based on Sony’s IMX500 image ...
AIC1000, a compact industrial AI camera built around the Raspberry Pi CM0 and designed for machine vision and industrial automation applications, such as quality inspection, object detection, and ...
Real-time face tracking has evolved from a research novelty into a practical tool for interactive robotics, surveillance, and automation. Advances in ...
The Raspberry Pi has brought digital camera experimentation within the reach of everybody, with its combination of an accessible computing platform and some almost-decent camera sensors. If there’s a ...