News

The Raspberry Pi Pico is both faster and cheaper than the Arduino Nano, but the nano has better resources and community.
The Raspberry Pi team has released the Pico, a $4 microcontroller that competes with Arduino.
A pico projector above the helix capable of projecting 1440 frames per second (an amazing device by itself) displays 72 ‘z-axis’ frames for each of the 60 ‘x and y frames’ per second.
Programming the Raspberry Pi Pico with Arduino IDE The tutorial on Hackster.io provides a comprehensive guide on how to program the Raspberry Pi Pico using the Arduino IDE.
Optoma’s diminutive projector makes a great traveling companion, despite somewhat fuzzy image projection. The prospect of projecting an image anywhere becomes a reality with Optoma’s Pico ...
After futzing around with a cheap pico projector, a webcam and a little bit of software, [Jas Strong] built herself a 3d scanner. In spite of the dozens of Kinect-based scanner projects, we’ve ...
Projectors are traditionally big noisy machines found in school classrooms or at the back of cinema auditoriums. Today, however, miniature pico-projectors show how this kind of display still has a ...
A new Arduino compatible audio development board will soon be launching via the Crowd Supply website offering an open source design for audio and digital signal processing (DSP) applications. The ...
If your main goal is to use a pico as an Apple accessory, the Cinemin Swivel is a solid choice. It also comes with a composite (RCA-type) A/V cable for connecting the projector to a digital camera ...
Pico introduced a new crowd-funding campaign on Indiegogo for an Android-based pocket projector and stylus combo, called the TouchPico. The mini projector can display up to an 80-inch image on any ...
LightBeam pairs a pico projector with a depth-sensing camera to provide some Kinect style controller-free interactive control to projected presentations.