Turn your family photos into retro 8-bit masterpieces with this Atari 2600 digital frame.
A replica of the DEC PDP-10 mainframe, made famous by the Hackers at the MIT AI Lab. Birthplace of Hacker Jargon, Emacs, AI
Create your handheld gaming console using an Arduino Nano ESP32 and play Doom on the go.
Build an interactive arcade bedside clock, with a touchscreen, and animated arcade figures that you can record a sound of your choice.
Recreating the look of a 60's CRT display with small LCDs.
A home-built bartop arcade cabinet powered by a Raspberry 2B running RetroPie.
This is a Sony Watchman FD-2A that I hacked to receive a composite video feed from a Raspberry Pi Zero W, to use as a badge.
A terminal for use with retro-computer kits. Built in acrylic, with a cheap LCD screen, USB keyboard and Raspberry Pi.
Why not put a Raspberry Pi into a 2007 netbook?
Accukey lives!
This is a faster and more sophisticated version of Ben Eater's monitor. It includes full disassembly of 65C02 instructions and uses SYNC.
If you've been following along with my series I've been on the hunt for RS232 reliability and now I've found it. MC6580 rocks!
A pong clock on your wrist
Vectron VGA Plus is a VGA graphics adapter that can interface with retro computers or microcontrollers.
Speed up retro computer development with a 400 MHz Raspberry Pi Pico-based ROM emulator.
The oldie but goodie returns in the form of the infrared joystick set from an old Atari game system. These will control multiple things.
A 555 timer Atari punk console for all the bleeps and bloops.
Play gesture-controlled Pong with a Raspberry Pi Pico!
Building my first tube amplifier, on a tight budget.
This is the continuation of previous project (servo motor + ultrasonic sensor ) with a little modification.
The phone will ring if you have an alert in your AWS Cloudwatch. If you pick up the handset, it tells you what's wrong.
A Python library to control a General Instrument AY-3-8910 sound generator, and make it speak.
Step away from buying retro game consoles and build your own with Raspberry Pi
Contains a linear scale in which the frequency is displayed with an color LED dot which is an integral part of the WS2812 LED strip.