Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. Tickling the fancy of tinkerers, the Raspberry Pi is a tiny ...
The Raspberry Pi isn't much to look at. It consists of a credit-card sized processing board that plugs into a computer monitor or TV. However, its humble design hasn't stopped it becoming the ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 gains the performance improvements of the new Raspberry Pi 5 microcomputer. The Raspberry Pi 500 gains the performance improvements of the new Raspberry Pi 5 microcomputer. is a ...
The Raspberry Pi 500 is a compact desktop computer that combines a 2.4 GHz Broadcom BC2712 quad-core ARM Cortex-A76 processor, 8GB of LPDDR4x-4267 memory, and support for WiFi 5, Bluetooth 5.0, and ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has unveiled what is possibly the world's cheapest and smallest fully-functioning computer, the miniature Raspberry Pi Zero. At £4 (or $5 abroad), with half a gigabyte of ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has released the Raspberry Pi 400, its first all-in-one PC, built into a keyboard. On the face of it, the Raspberry Pi 400 looks like just another bluetooth keyboard. Flip ...
For all those fun Raspberry Pi projects you're working on, power is a must. Outside a USB power supply, you can also provide ...
More than a million Raspberry Pi computers have been made in Britain, with 1.75m sold globally since going on sale for around £30 in February 2012. The initial batch of the credit card-sized barebones ...
Eben Upton was an academic working in computer science at Cambridge University when, five years ago, he began to notice a disturbing trait among the applicants he was interviewing for degree course ...
Dr Eben Upton of the Raspberry Pi Foundation shows Rory Cellan-Jones how the computer works The hope of Britain's future computer science industry is gathered around a tiny device in a school ...
A whole computer contained in a keyboard - just connect it to a monitor and you are ready to go. It sounds like an idea from the 1980s. Remember the ZX Spectrum, the Commodore Amiga or the BBC Micro?
A whole computer contained in a keyboard - just connect it to a monitor and you are ready to go. It sounds like an idea from the 1980s. Remember the ZX Spectrum, the Commodore Amiga or the BBC Micro?