Raspberry Pi enthusiasts but are looking for an easier way to add multiple functions to their Raspberry PI models A+, B+ B2 and Zero mini PCs are interested in a new multifunctional Hat Board which is ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation have been busy little bees for the last couple of years producing their own silicon, new boards and now in collaboration with the LEGO Education team a new HAT to connect ...
One of the things that makes Raspberry Pi’s small and inexpensive single-board computers interesting is the 40-pin connectors that makes it possible to connect expansion boards called HATs (which ...
The Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ is an add-on board for connecting M.2 M-key compatible devices to the Raspberry Pi 5. It has a data transfer speed of up to 500MB/s and costs $12 (approximately 1,880 yen). M ...
Raspberry Pi has launched a new product that would make it easier to build robots out of LEGO components. The Build HAT (or Hardware Attached on Top), as it is called, is an add-on device that plugs ...
Power over Ethernet (PoE) is nothing new to the Raspberry Pi. Introduced with the Raspberry Pi 3B+, PoE provides power over a network connection and is handy for installing a Raspberry Pi in a remote ...
Mick Jagger famously said that you cain’t always get what you want. But this is Hackaday, and we make what we want or can’t get. Case in point: [Andrew Tudoroi] is drawn to retro LEDs and wanted one ...
Raspberry Pi’s single-board computers have supported expansion boards called HATs (Hardware Attached on Top) for more than a decade. But those boards have typically had to rely on the 40-pin headers ...
If you own a Raspberry Pi, but want to ditch the power cable, it's possible using either a battery or a Power over Ethernet (PoE) HAT, which draws power from an Ethernet cable instead. And the ...
Raspberry Pi sells little add-on boards that fit on top of the tiny computer. This kind of board is called a hat. Pardon me, it’s HAT for “hardware on top.” C’mon, that’s freakin’ adorable. Anyway, ...
Jeff Geerling has created another fantastic tutorial and overview providing more insight into how the Raspberry Pi Compute Modules 4 and 5, can be paired with a compatible carrier boards and a 5 Gbps ...