New #RaspberryPi night-vision camera module imminent

The cat is out of the bag now!

The Foundation is soon to announce the availability of the Pi Noir. It’s a new version of the camera module, but with the IR filter removed thereby making it a night-vision camera. No strictly official announcement yet, but here’s the evidence:

This is great news for those who want to do things with the camera at night, including astronomical photography.

So, no more breaking the camera apart to remove that filter – thank goodness!

Cambridge Raspberry Jam – 21st September – The Big Write-Up (#rjam #raspberrypi @raspberry_pi)

Whew! Absolutely shattered, but exhilarated that the Jam on Saturday was a success and went as smoothly as it could have done.

I decided to write this account and create a ‘virtual Jam’ out of the day. Many thanks to Matt Hawkins & Leo White for photos and Andy Batey for sorting out and uploading the videos onto YouTube. Thanks also to John Alexander for recording the Ciseco kit demo workshop!

Arrival

Tim Richardson and I arrived at the Institute of Astronomy at 10.30am and met Andy in the Foyer. Andy works at the Institute, got us the venue and has been an absolute star about everything – including wrangling us some last-minute tables and a trolley to transport them with, not to mention sorting out live streaming so that over 500 individual people were able to join us virtually!

We set about laying out the Marketplace and the Show-and-Tell areas and were soon joined by our valiant marshals and also the caterer, Crazy Cow Catering (who we were very pleased to have join us – thanks Theresa!!!). Little by little, the place took shape and when the vendors arrived we had all their tables ready. I erected a front-desk exhibition stand… which convinced me that next time I want one easier to put up… and sorted out the registration desk with registration badges and paperwork.

Our presenters and show-and-tellers arrived next and we set about accommodating them in the lecture theatre and on the mezzanine levels respectively. Soon after, people started to arrive for registration and pretty soon the room was starting to buzz with plenty of Pi-related chatter. Out of 120 people registering, 110 turned up which is a very good percentage. We realised afterwards that we could have fitted in more people, but you live and learn!

First presentation session

We had a bit of a mammoth session planned to start with. Lesson learned – next time we make the sessions shorter! First of all, I gave an introduction… Now, I’m not much of a public speaker, so be forewarned!

After I’d finished my rambling, Ryan Walmsley (@ryanteck) presented on his new project, RPiDNS. This will give you the ability to host a website on your Pi at home. At the moment, most internet users get a ‘dynamic IP’ which means that each time your home router connects to the internet your internet address changes. RPiDNS will deal with that by keeping a watch on your IP and linking it to a named address that you specify. For more info, please comment on this blog post and I’ll get Ryan to come and explain! Here’s his presentation:

Next up was Alex Eames from RasPi.tv. He has been developing a board called the RasPiO which plugs into the GPIO and gives you all kinds of connection possibilities including much-needed analog inputs via a chip on the board. As with most tech demos, this one went slightly awry but it was entertaining as anything and included some much-needed audience participation.

As I previously mentioned, we had a Marketplace area at this Jam which proved to be hugely popular. Exhibiting in the Marketplace were the following vendors:

We decided to give them an opportunity to tell the audience what they had to offer and what they’d been working on. Here are the first two ‘lightning talks’ – Ciseco & Cyntech:

Next up (I told you it was a mammoth session!) we had the indefatigable Jim Darby who at the last Jam thrilled us all with his Arduinos and strings of lights. This time he gave a basic talk on using the GPIO pins and doing simple things with them.

We finished the session (Phew!) with another two lightning talks. This time from PiBorg and The PiHut:

Myself and Tim were presented with customised cases by The Pi Hut. I don’t have a picture to hand, but suffice to say they are things of beauty – brilliantly made wooden Pi cases with Raspberry Jam and CamJam and today’s date on them. Really lovely!

With our bladders fit to burst, I called an end to the first session.

First break

During the breaks, we’d organised for the vendors to do some demos of their kit in the small meeting room behind the lecture theatre. These proved very popular and were more-or-less full to capacity with 30 people allowed into each demo. In this first break, we had:

John Alexander recorded the Ciseco session and you can view that here:

People also were then free to use the Marketplace. Tim had come up with the idea of having a PayPal kiosk that people could use as most of the vendors couldn’t take card payment. This seemed to go down well, although sometimes the speed of the kiosk and the fact we only had one caused a queue to form. It ran from a Pi though!

Here are some photos of the Marketplace (thanks Leo!):

Ciseco

The Pi Hut

PiBorg

Cyntech/Pimoroni

Crazy Cow, our Caterer

The whole foyer (taken from the show-and-tell mezzanine). Marketplace to the left and top, PayPal kiosk to the right

We also had some show-and-tell going on with projects people had brought in, but more on that later.

Second presentation session

Our second session was much shorter! First up was Matthew Manning (Raspberry Pi IV Beginners) who spoke about the Pi Ferret which enables companies to test out their security by breaking it! It’s a Pi that attached to a network and then allows an incoming SSH tunnel to infiltrate that network. It reminds me so much of that film Sneakers! Here’s Matt’s talk:

And lastly we had Leo White who talked us through the numerous iterations of his attempts to hack a Raspberry Pi into a Big Trak! Here’s the presentation:

And that was it for the presentations, though there was still another break session to go.

Second break

The kit demos continued with:

And of course the Marketplace was open, as was the Show-and-Tell area. We were running two competitions at the Jam. The first was for ‘Best in Show’ (which was for the show-and-tell exhibitors only) and also ‘best idea’ which was just a thought exercise that anyone could enter for coolest idea for a Pi project. Both projects were sponsored by Cyntech who generously offered a PiHub and one of their new boards, the Pibrella, as prizes. Here are some shots of the show-and-tell area:

Robotic fun with Matt Hawkins and Graham Taylor

Raspberry Pi-controlled train set by the Raspberry Pi Guy!

Big Traks galore from Leo White.

Pan & Tilt rig for the camera module

The final picture is of Daniel Bull‘s Astro Blaster console. Daniel painstakingly restored and rebuilt this console which uses a Raspberry Pi emulator to let you play games from waaaay back like Space Invaders, Asteroids, that kind of thing. Daniel won the Best-in-Show prize for his efforts. He’d previously exhibited this project at the Milton Keynes Raspberry Jam and wrote a full account of the restoration and development on their forum. Read all about it here.

We’d like to extend our thanks to Alex Eames of RasPi.tv for being our judge on the day.

The competition for best idea has been handed over to the Cyntech guys for judging and we hope to hear who the winner is in the next week or so.

In conclusion

Myself and Tim really enjoyed organising the Jam and we’re planning the next one to be either in November or early December. I’m in a theatre show at the end of November so it might be better to wait until after that, maybe… I dunno yet! And we still need to confirm the venue, although I’d love to have it at the Institute again.

The big news for next time, though, is that thanks to some sponsorship we are going to be running some programming and tinkering workshops for kids. We’ve been working towards that goal, getting support from adults and sorting out the sponsorship, and I’m pleased that it’s only taken a relatively short time to get to this point. We hope to get great support from the Pi community, especially those who are used to dealing with kids and can help us do the teaching side of things. So, if you’ve got a child (or you are one!) and you want to learn to program and tinker with the Pi, let me know! Also, if you’re willing to help on the day, or have any advice, please contact me – you can comment below, contact me using the link in the menu or tweet me @recantha!

 

Sonic Pi – a computing resource for teachers (and all of us!) #RaspberryPi

Just saw this on the Foundation site and wanted to share it with you all as it’s just the kind of educational resource that is vital for the Pi to be used in schools. I think I’ll let the Foundation’s words speak for themselves:

Carrie Anne Philbin, an absolutely inspirational CS teacher of the sort I wish had been around when I was a kid, has been doing a lot of work with the Pi in her lessons over the last year or so. She’s creator of the Geek Gurl Diaries YouTube web series, a Computer Science and ICT teacher, recipient of TalkTalk’s London 2013 Digital Heroes award, and somebody that all of us at Raspberry Pi think very, very highly of. Most recently, Carrie Anne has spent much of the summer working with Dr Sam Aaron at the University of Cambridge on a Key Stage 3 scheme of work for schools, tailored for England’s new programme of study, based around a little something of Sam’s called Sonic Pi.

Sonic Pi is a programming environment that allows you to make sounds. Which is a very dull way of saying that it’s a way to build your own synthesiser from scratch. Sonic Pi, and the associated teaching and learning materials, are open and free.

Read more about this fantastic resource on the Foundation’s site or head on over to the Sonic Pi website directly.

Make your #RaspberryPi tweet its temperature

Average Man vs Raspberry Pi: Make your Raspberry Pi Tweet its Temperature

The “Average Man” has blogged about using the IfThisThenThat service to receive email from his Raspberry Pi and convert that into a tweet. The email contains the temperature of his Raspberry Pi!

He concedes that this isn’t the most direct way of doing it, but of course using IFTTT gives you more options of dispersing the information than just Twitter.

Read it and have a go yourself!