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If you want to skip out on expensive or less private security cameras, the Raspberry Pi has your home covered.
Using the Raspberry Pi and the Raspberry Pi Camera Board, Wolf manages to put together a very simple point and shoot camera.
About $60 and four easy steps are all that separate you from your own DIY HomeKit camera. For this project, we are going to make our own HomeKit camera using a Raspberry Pi.
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 ...
To make this, you’ll need to track down a Pi Zero, the Pi camera, a few cables, a battery, and a 3D printed case. Once you make it, the camera snaps a photo every 15 seconds (you can change this ...
In this tutorial we'll show you how you can build your very own security camera that can detect movement, record a livestream and back up the video onto a server using a Raspberry Pi and a webcam.
What makes [mwagner1]’s Raspberry Pi Zero-based WiFi camera project noteworthy isn’t so much the fact that he’s used the hardware to make a streaming camera, but that he’s t… ...
The Raspberry Pi is the foundation of many IoT camera projects, but enclosures are often something left up to the user. [Mare] found that a serviceable outdoor enclosure could be made with a trip t… ...
Raspberry Pi currently offers a pair of native lenses for the camera, including a 6mm lens for $25 and a 16mm lens for $50.
The Raspberry Pi AI camera features an integrated AI chip for on-device processing, making it ideal for developers and hobbyists interested in AI and computer vision.