If you've got a Raspberry Pi and a just a little bit of coding know-how, you can make these weird projects that are sure to ...
Hosted on MSN
Turn your Raspberry Pi into a smart data logger
With just a Raspberry Pi, a few sensors, and some Python code, you can create a powerful and budget-friendly data logger. From tracking temperature and humidity to monitoring pressure or light levels, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: China’s SamuRoid humanoid robot offers smarter interactions in a compact form
A small humanoid robot from China is pushing the boundaries of affordable embodied AI.
Do we even need Anthropic or OpenAI's top models, or can we get away with a smaller local model? Sure, it might be slower, ...
Former president Arif Alvi has reportedly built a self-hosted AI archive using Python, showcasing independent innovation.
This article presents a practical implementation of encrypted message exchange between two Raspberry Pi devices using a ...
The memory price surge has hit Raspberry Pi, which has introduced three price rises in four months. The 16GB Pi 5 model gets a $100 hike, taking its retail price to $305. It originally cost $120, but ...
If you want to dabble in audio digital signal processing, you would probably think of grabbing a dedicated DSP chip. But thanks to [WeebLabs], you could just pick up a Pi Pico and use this ...
How-To Geek on MSN
I used Claude to build a Raspberry Pi project I had no idea how to start
My own retro productivity game.
When it comes to hacks, we’re always amazed by the aesthetic of the design as much as we are by the intricacies of the circuit or the cleverness of the software. We think it’s always fun to assemble ...
28don MSN
China Is Obsessed With ‘Lobsters’ That Book Flights & Check Emails: Decoding AI Assistant OpenClaw
OpenClaw, an open-source AI agent with a red lobster logo, has sparked a nationwide craze in China in early 2026.Unlike standard chatbots, OpenClaw is an “execution AI” designed to perform real-world ...
Co-authored by BTQ Chief Quantum Officer Dr. Gavin K. Brennen, the research introduces a new error-correction framework for permutation-invariant codes--an enabling step toward more reliable quantum ...
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