News

Learn how to turn a Raspberry Pi into a custom router to bypass ISP restrictions, protect your privacy, and secure your internet connection.
LattePanda IOTA is a new Intel Processor N150 SBC equipped with up to 16GB LPDDR5 and 128GB eMMC flash, as well as a ...
Turn an unused Raspberry Pi into something useful with projects like a travel router, weather station, game server, streaming ...
The folks at Raspberry Pi have announced a new touchscreen component for people using boards to create miniature touchscreen appliances: The 5-inch Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 is a 720p IPS ...
Raspberry Pi’s single-board computers are full-fledged PCs that can work with a wide variety of accessories. But every now and then the folks that make the little PCs introduce first-party hardware ...
The Argon ONE UP is a laptop with a 14 inch, 1920 x 1200 pixel IPS LCD display, an aluminum body, backlit keyboard, and one thing that sets it apart from most other laptops: the Argon ONE UP is ...
The UNC2891 hacking group, also known as LightBasin, used a 4G-equipped Raspberry Pi hidden in a bank's network to bypass security defenses in a newly discovered attack. The single-board computer was ...
A covert attack targeting ATM infrastructure has been observed using a hidden Raspberry Pi device to breach internal bank systems. The intrusion involved physical access, a rarely seen anti-forensics ...
Android Auto turned ten years old this year, and most automakers have adopted it by now. But unless you drive a car from the past couple of years, chances are that it does not support wireless Android ...
In my last article I discussed running VMware's ESXi 8 hypervisors and how I planned to install it on a Raspberry Pi 5-based system, specifically the Pi 500, which is basically a Pi 5 housed inside of ...
In 2020, I went on a writing spree, producing several articles about running VMware's bare-metal, type 1 hypervisor, ESXi 7, on a Raspberry Pi 4. In fact, I wrote so many that a publisher from ...
In a nutshell: Interested in tinkering with a Raspberry Pi 5 but put off by the utilitarian nature of a bare PCB, or simply prefer to work with something that is ready to use right out of the box?