Just don’t call it a HAT, while it may look the part, is very specific that it does not officially meet the HAT specifications put out by the Raspberry Pi Foundation.Įven if you aren’t terribly interested in peering into the infinite void above, the extremely detailed write-up has done contains tons of multidisciplinary information that you may find useful. Over the course of several posts on his blog, walks us though the creation of his open source Raspberry Pi add-on board that controls a laundry list of sensors and optical gear. When wanted to control his telescope and astrophotography hardware, he took the second path in a big way. We cover it all here at Hackaday, but we’ve certainly got a soft spot for the latter approach, even if some may feel it falls into the dreaded territory of “Not A Hack”. When somebody tackles an engineering problem, there are two possible paths: they can throw together a quick and dirty fix that fits their needs (the classic “hack”, as it were), or they can go the extra mile to develop a well documented solution that helps the community as a whole.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |