It’s been a while since we’ve seen [Sprite_tm] pull a project from thin air, and we haven’t seen him do anything with a Raspberry Pi yet. All things must pass, and finally [Sprite] has unleashed his ...
The $35 Raspberry Pi hobby board is one of the most innovative pieces of circuitry that we've seen yet. It's so simple and cheap, yet it leads to thousands of hackers and modders cooking up their own ...
Ah, the cocktail arcade cabinet. With the right design, its able to blend right in to any living room decor, much more than any traditional stand-up cabinet, at least. [graham] over on Instructables ...
XDA Developers on MSN
I adore this modular Raspberry Pi arcade cabinet, and I think you will too
Raspberry Pi arcade with magnetic, swappable control panels is a retro gamer's dream. Five control layouts can be swapped in ~20 seconds via embedded neodymium magnets. Build videos and 3D files let ...
Gamers thinking of building their very own Raspberry Pi powered desktop arcade cabinet may be interested in a new creation by Youmagine member Sean Charlesworth and Jeremy Williams. The awesome Pi ...
A hacker called [Sprite_tm] AKA Jeroen Domburg built his own teeny, tiny Raspberry Pi-based MAME cabinet using some laser-cut plexiglass, some custom controls, and a eeny, weenie 2.4-inch TFT display.
On top of the cost, it's even more questionable when you figure that the Pi probably can't handle most of the fighter games of the 90s. I remember MAME on a Pentium III: it was barely capable of ...
The Raspberry Pi may not be the most powerful computer around, but it’s fast enough to handle classic arcade-style video games. It’s also smaller than a pack of cards. So it was just a matter of time ...
Adafruit has created the world's smallest Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator (MAME) arcade cabinet using Raspberry Pi Zero computer. MAME arcade cabinets are popular all over the world and they attract ...
Over the years, we have featured a number of DIY gaming arcade cabinets here on Geeky Gadgets, but never anything quite as small as the one created by SpiritMods using a $35 Raspberry Pi mini PC. The ...
Alright, I might as well start this thread, after mentioning this project in a couple other threads here. Brains and Software: As already mentioned, the computer running the show is a Raspberry Pi.
“Using calipers, I measured each part and came up with a case idea,” Burgess reports. “Rather than fully enclose everything, some elements (the Perma-Proto board holding the controls, plus the ...
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