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Discover how the Raspberry Pi 5 16GB tablet paired with RasPad 4 delivers a Linux-powered touchscreen experience for tech enthusiasts.
If you are interested in building your very own Raspberry Pi tablet, you may be intrigued by a project from “jrberendt” who has ingeniously created a tablet powered by a Raspberry Pi 4 Model B ...
Discover 4 innovative Raspberry Pi projects that go beyond novelties, offering practical solutions for personal cloud storage ...
The PiPad is the name Michael Castor gave to the Raspberry Pi wood and carbon fiber tablet he built after gathering all the necessary parts. … ...
The Raspberry Pi is an inexpensive computer designed for education and DIY purposes. For about $35 you get a tiny device with a processor, memory, input and output, and a memory card slot. Just ...
The CutiePie is a tablet with a 8 inch, 1280 x 800 pixel display, a 5,000 mAh battery, and a carrying handle. It’s also a modular, open source device that’s powered by a Raspberry Pi Compute ...
We’ve seen Raspberry Pi-powered tablets before, but they’re always a bit clunky to actually build. Adafruit has put together a guide that shows one of the easiest, best looking, and cheapest ...
Now people who want to give their Pi touchscreen capabilities have the option to transform the mini-computer into a tablet thanks to a new 7-inch touch display that’s on sale right now for just $60.
Michael Castor, an evangelist for Make magazine’s online store Maker Shed, did just that, putting together a Raspberry Pi-based tablet he dubbed the PiPad, complete with a handsome wooden frame that ...
So let’s start at the SailPi tablet which is a Raspberry Pi running the Sailfish OS on an LCD touch screen powered by a cell phone battery pack.
Most Raspberry Pi software isn’t setup for a touchscreen, but the post explains some of the issues they found when using a different Linux build instead of the default tablet software from the ...
Tablets are typically expensive and don't exactly offer up much of chance for customization. If you don't mind making your own tablet, DIYer Michael Castor shows off his Raspberry Pi-powered tablet.