Unboxing the new Samsung Galaxy Fold. The Galaxy Fold is the first folding smartphone Unbox Therapy has tried. The Galaxy Fold is the most futuristic smartphone Unbox Therapy has tried. How does the Samsung Galaxy Fold stack up against the other flagship devices like Apple iPhone, Huawei Mate X and others? Are foldable smartphones the future of smartphones? Computing devices in general? Enjoy
Unbox Therapy’s Samsung Galaxy Fold hands on video.
Technology
NVIDIA Jetson Nano Dolphin Emulator Test – Jetson Nano SBC
The all New Nvidia Jetson Nano Single Board Computer “ DEV BOARD” Can run the Dolphin emulator! This is a very early test.
ODROID N2 First Look Amlogic S922X SBC – Overview And Android Test
In this video, ETA Prime takes a look at the all-new Odroid N2 Single Board computer powered by the new Amlogic S922X hexa-core “6 For CPU” Hardkernle has a couple OS distros available right now. He will be testing out the first Android 9.0 build Run some benchmark, test a couple native android games and give you his initial thoughts.
ODROID N2 First Look Amlogic S922X SBC – Overview And Android Test
In this video, ETA Prime takes a look at the all-new Odroid N2 Single Board computer powered by the new Amlogic S922X hexa-core “6 For CPU” Hardkernle has a couple OS distros available right now.
NVIDIA Jetson Nano Review – Tegra X1 Single Board Computer
The NVIDIA Jetson Nano developer kit is here and its a pretty sweet piece of kit! This single board computer pack an underclocked Nvidia Tegra X1 CPU found in the Shield TV and Nintendo Switch, with 4Gb of LPDDR4 ram and 128 Cuda Core GPU this board is a tiny monster marked for Ai but it can be used as an everyday Linux PC for web browsing Video playback and Emulation.
ESP32-CAM Video Streaming and Face Recognition with Arduino IDE
This video is a quick getting started guide for the ESP32-CAM board. We’ll show you how to setup a video streaming web server with face recognition and detection in less than 5 minutes using the CameraWebServer example.
Installing Unified Remote for Raspberry Pi
I recently started using Unified Remote fro several of my Media Center devices and other computers through out my home, this includes my security console as well as all TVs and some various other devices.
I have a Raspberry Pi Zero W that I’ve configured for use as a portable desktop PC, and is perfect for traveling and hotel stays, yet I didn’t want to lug around a keyboard and mouse or additional hardware.
Enter Unified Remote!
It turns your cell phone into a keyboard, mouse, game controller or other remote control functionality! It does require a server component to install on each device you wish to control, but lucky for us there is a Raspberry Pi version.
To install, you can follow these simple command lines to get everything up and running.
wget -O urserver.deb http://www.unifiedremote.com/d/rpi-deb
sudo dpkg -i urserver.deb
Once installed, you may need to start the service for the first time.
sudo /opt/urserver/urserver-start
After the service has been started, you can either navigate to the management console on the Pi itself via http://localhost:9510/web or with the IP address of your Raspberry Pi device http://<IPAddress>:9510/web
This console will allow you to configure WiFi, Bluetooth and WebUI connectivity, set passwords and other functionality.
If you aren’t booting to a desktop environment, and instead booting to something like RetroPie, you may need to set the service to start with rc.local.
To do so, you can do the following.
sudo nano /etc/rc.local
And add the following line, being sure to include the & at the end.
sudo /opt/urserver/urserver-start &
Sources:
Installing Unified Remote on Debian via CLI
Unified Remote home page
How Motherboards Are Made (2019) | Taiwan Automated Factory Tour, ft. Gigabyte
Motherboard manufacturing is a refined process, but each board still takes upwards of an hour to finalize on the assembly line. About half of the assembly is now done by automated SMT lines, with the rest being manual quality checks and large component installation (like PCIe slots). As for how to make a video card, it follows exactly the same process — the difference is just which board is being fed through the machines on each day.
Keychron K1 Slim Wireless Mechanical Keyboard – Unboxing & Review
The Keychron K1, formerly known as the Keytron K1
The Rubbish Robot
Shining the spotlight on a less known maker, Ethan David, we take a look at his Rubbish Robot.
A Raspberry Pi based robot to assist in recycling his rubbish. A fun little project, you may enjoy.