Raspberry Pi Pico Rubber Ducky This project demonstrates how to use a Raspberry Pi Pico as a USB Rubber Ducky — a device that simulates a keyboard and executes pre-programmed keystrokes to automate ...
Install and have your USB Rubber Ducky working in less than 5 minutes. Download the latest release from the Releases page. Plug the device into a USB port while holding the boot button. It will show ...
The Raspberry Pi Pico is a change from the previous Pis that people are used to. This is because it is not a Linux computer, but it is a microcontroller board just like Arduino. The biggest selling ...
Last week we saw a giant Raspberry Pi board that actually works, now the smallest of the Pi boards has been used to make an absolutely tiny, yet fully-functional keyboard. Hackaday user TEC.IST couldn ...
With hackers and makers building custom computing devices that don’t necessarily follow conventional design paradigms, there’s been a growing demand for smaller and smaller keyboards. Many of the ...
The field of robotics is expanding, and this is the perfect time to learn how to create robots at home for different purposes. This book will help you take your first steps in planning, building, and ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has announced the release of the Raspberry Pi Pico 2, priced at $5, designed for both performance and compatibility with its predecessor, the Raspberry Pi Pico. This second ...
If you are having fun playing with the new Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller launched last month by the Raspberry Pi Foundation. You may be interested in a new project published to the Hackster.io ...
With its copious number of GPIO pins and native USB, the Raspberry Pi Pico is arguably the ideal microcontroller for developing your own platform agnostic USB Human Input Devices. But you don’t have ...