Raspberry Pint : Raspberry Pi and other Digital Making Fun -Arduino, ESP32, etc.
Details
This is Raspberry Pint, where we share our digital making experiences.
Most of our presentations are about building personal or professional projects with Raspberry Pis, Arduinos, ESP32s, Microbits, etc. We also welcome presentations about skills and techniques such as website design, PCB design, SW development, 3D printing, soldering, etc. Occasionally, we have had presentations about deep learning, big data, IoT, etc. and would love to hear about what you do in your hobby or professional life. All makers and all digital making welcome. The quirkier, the better.
This is a Hybrid Meeting. We will be holding at 'The Duke Of Sussex'. We will be in the 'Petworth Room', which is on the first floor - take the stairs between the pub and the restaurant. The stairs also lead to the toilets.
Duke Of Sussex Waterloo 23 Baylis Road, Waterloo, London, Greater London, SE1 7AY
Whilst more of our presentations are put onto an agenda, ad hoc presentations also happen, as well as people just bringing stuff to show.
Everyone is welcome to take part - we have no lower or upper age limit and all content is suitable for everyone.
Joining information is available on this page once you register.
## AGENDA**:**
### 19:00 HALPI2 and Halos: A Robust Pi, No Terminal Required
Matti Airas from Hat Labs presents HALPI2, a Raspberry Pi CM5-based computer designed for boats and other demanding environments. He'll walk through the hardware design and share lessons from taking a Pi project from prototype to manufactured product. The second half covers Halos, a container-based operating system that gives HALPI2 a browser-managed interface with app packaging, SSO, and a dashboard - no SSH required.
### 20:00 How Does a Sand Table Actually Work? Building Dune Weaver
It looks like magic — a steel ball drawing perfect geometric patterns in sand, on its own, forever. Tuan Nguyen pulls back the curtain on the hardware, firmware, and software that make Dune Weaver tick, and explains why something that looks simple is anything but.
