Alongside the company’s Camera Module 3, it’s also releasing a new module for use with M12-mount lenses. Alongside the company’s Camera Module 3, it’s also releasing a new module for use with ...
The new Camera Module 3 boasts higher resolution, bigger pixels, and more field-of-view options than its predecessors. Nearly 10 years after introducing its first camera module, Raspberry Pi this week ...
Create a thermal camera with Raspberry Pi easily with detailed instructions and a bill of materials. The project combines the Raspberry Pi's camera feed with a thermal graphic overlay controlled by a ...
This month came the announcement of some new camera modules from Raspberry Pi. All eyes were on version 3 of their standard camera module, but they also sneaked out a new version of their high quality ...
Raspberry Pi has announced the third version of its Raspberry Pi Camera Module, which comes in four variants that start at $25 and features HDR imaging and autofocus for the first time. It's also ...
Luke has been working in consumer tech for over a decade and is an expert in cameras, computing, VR and audio. He joined Pocket-lint in 2021 and can always be found writing reviews, news and features ...
Raspberry Pi has just introduced a new camera module in the high-quality camera format. For the same $50 price you would shell out for the HQ camera, you get roughly eight times fewer pixels. But this ...
Raspberry Pis will soon have many more camera-based projects available to them, as the newest Camera Module from the single-board computer maker allows for autofocus, high dynamic range, lower-light ...
Have you ever dreamed of creating your own cinema-grade camera without breaking the bank? For many aspiring filmmakers and tech enthusiasts, the idea of building something so intricate might seem out ...
Global shutter sensors with no skew or distortion have been promised as the future of cameras for years now, but so far only a handful of products with that tech have made it to market. Now, Raspberry ...
In a lovely example of thinking outside the box, researchers from Korean institutes KIST and KAIST have come up with a scalable gripper for robots that can lift 700x its own mass. The trick is to use ...