Pi Tin is a pocket-sized console that fits inside an Altoids tin. Uses Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W & 2.8" display for retro gaming. Gamepad design mimics Gameboy Advance SP for authentic feel. While you can ...
It’s been awhile since we’ve seen a good Altoids tin project, but over on Hackmypi, they’ve got a guide from stuffing the $5 Raspberry Pi Zero and a touch screen into a tin. The project here uses an ...
The Altoids mints tin is perhaps the most iconic part of the product (which may say something about the mints themselves, I guess?), and in today's life hack-obsessed world, people have long been ...
Get ready for a serious Geeksgiving celebration. The Raspberry Pi Foundation today announced its latest wonder: The ultra-low-cost Raspberry Pi Zero. At $5 per unit, it may rank as the world’s ...
If you would like to create a Raspberry Pi Zero pocket workstation using an old Altoids tin complete with tiny monitor, a project published to the HackMyPi website by MWAGNER might be worth more ...
The MintyPi was a popular project that put a Raspberry Pi inside an Altoids tin to make a pocketable gaming handheld. Unfortunately, it’s not the easiest build to replicate anymore, but [jackw01] was ...
Broadcom engineer Eben Upton started a foundation with a simple goal: to make and sell an inexpensive computer that could help teach children computer programming. The result: Upton created the ...
A few months ago, [wermy] built the mintyPi, a Raspberry Pi-based gaming console that fits inside an Altoids tin. It’s amazing — there’s a composite LCD, an audio DAC, and a chopped up Nintendo ...