Testeur d'humidité solaire pour plante. Sommaire : Raspberry PI & Arduino, domotique, robotique, et pleins de trucs en “ique” AirPi: DIY Airplay Speakers - John Whittington EngineerJohn Whittington Engineer. We have speakers in all the ground floor rooms of our house, all driven from the same amp.
It’s neat but controlling the input requires going back to the amp. Surrounded by iDevices too and with apps like iPlayer, Spotify and home share on iTunes, being able to throw audio to the speaker system had to be done. Que Airplay, however, this requires a nice Airplay amp or getting an AirPort. I then found out about Shairport, a program that emulates an AirPort’s Airplay function. With a Raspberry Pi kicking around, I had just found its new job. Quite a lot has changed in the year since I did this and rather than try and add more updates to this, I have run through the process again and created a new tutorial. I opted for the Arch Pi distribution for this, simply because it is my Linux of the moment and with no window manager, is perfect for a standalone device.
Next you’ll need to install the tools required to compile in Arch. pacman -S kernel26-headers file base-devel abs. Plus de 50 idées pour votre Raspberry Pi « Korben Korben. Nous sommes nombreux à nous être procuré un petit ordinateur Raspberry Pi pour nous lancer dans des projets de ouf malade...
C'est très cool, mais à part le classique Media Center XBMC, qu'avez-vous fait avec votre Raspberry Pi ? Si vous séchez niveau idées, voici une petite sélection que j'ai rassemblée au cours des derniers mois. J'imagine qu'il y a encore beaucoup d'autres idées et de tutos, donc n'hésitez pas à partager les liens dans les commentaires, je les rajouterai à ma liste. Merci ! En attendant, j'espère que ceux-ci vous donneront de l'inspiration... On peut donc en faire : Et si vous cherchez un moyen rapide et pas cher de faire un boitier de protection pour vos Raspberry Pi, pensez aux LEGO. Bon, je pourrai continuer comme ça toute la journée, mais va bien falloir que je m'arrête.
Amusez-vous bien ! Rejoignez les 60492 korbenautes et réveillez le bidouilleur qui est en vous Suivez KorbenUn jour ça vous sauvera la vie.. The Lean Hardware Startup: From Prototype To Production. Editor’s note: Cyril Ebersweiler is the founder of the pioneering hardware startup accelerator HAXLR8R (which is now looking for applicants) and Partner at SOSVentures.
Benjamin Joffe is an expert on startup ecosystems, angel investor and Advisor at HAXLR8R. Both invest in companies around the world and spent over a decade in China and Japan. This is Part 1 of a series. If the printing press was about “anyone can read,” the web about “anyone can write,” the hardware ecosystem changed enough to say today “anyone can build.” This idea – that anyone can build – is the cornerstone of the new “lean hardware startup.” Yet, despite successes like Square, Jawbone, and Fitbit, hardware startups continue to look daunting to entrepreneurs and investors alike. The first challenge for hardware entrepreneurs is to get from your first prototype with 3D-printed parts, duct tape and cardboard to production-ready. Design with the right components Hardware often starts with a “bag of parts.” Blink(1), the USB RGB LED by ThingM. Kickstarter Collections Projects We Love Saved Trending Nearly Funded.