There are countless ways to use a Raspberry Pi as a retro game console, but if you’re connecting that Pi to a HDTV, you’re losing a bit of the magic. Over on Hackaday, DIYer Jon crams a Raspberry Pi ...
Eli is a freelance journalist who lives in Detroit, MI. He got his start in journalism covering video games and sports for Heavy before branching out into greater esports coverage at Dexerto. He also ...
When [FinnAndersen] found an old TV set by the side of the road, he did what any self-respecting DIY/gaming enthusiast would do: He took it apart and installed a Raspberry Pi 3 running RetroPie in it ...
The Raspberry Pi comes into the picture as a way to remove that last bit of friction—hooking up a computer to my TV to work.
With computer chip famine stretching into the future, it's growing increasingly expensive to source parts for numerous electronics. This is affecting every sector of technology as I've reported ...
Is the Casio FX9000P a calculator or a computer? It’s hard to tell since Casio did make calculators that would run BASIC. [Menadue] didn’t know either, but since it had a CRT, a Z80, and memory ...
The SD card was preloaded with the 32-bit Raspberry Pi OS, but due to my being a beginner, I didn't realize I'd overwrite that immediately by installing RetroPie, the retro gaming emulator I chose.