Literally what am scouting for so I can get it on my birthday lmfao it's so painful to see how the model I want costs 5000 INR but on Amazon where its in stock it's costs like 10,000 INR+ like bruh
LEDs are an area I haven't explored too much. I actually have a few different products and rolls of LEDs in a box right now... just haven't had the week or two to really start messing around with them. I know it'll become a mild addiction and suddenly my kids will wonder why the entire house is a rainbow of color once I'm done :D
@@rednassie1101 you could pitch it by saying changing to red lights at night will help improve sleep quality and lessen the impact of sleep inertia so you can wake up more quickly too.
Couldn't have chosen a better timing to upload, thank you! Got my first Pi coming in 2 days and I've been scratching my head for what to do with them, great list!
RPi just turned 10? Wow, they grow up so fast! Between my pi-hole and an ad blocking browser extension, whenever I use the internet away from home I always experience a bit of culture shock at the number of ads and website slowdowns. RPis are such great systems. I use one as a webdev platform to force me to code efficiently. My logic is that if I can make code that loads/runs fast on a Pi without skimping on function or design, then I'm doing it right.. I'm currently working out the electrical connections and interface design for an RPi zero 2W smart thermostat (once I can get my hands on a 02W!). Yes, I know others have made them, but doing it from scratch is half the fun (and half the frustration!). Home automation is the project to follow that one.
I basically wont touch the internet without an adblocker. Its like the advertisers know what buttons to push to make me hate them and never want to give them money. Animating, getting in the way, fake download buttons
I tried to only include projects where the Raspberry Pi is the perfect fit-not too overkill, not too weak. Plus, it helps that I've built each of these projects myself and have some experience to back up the recommendation ;) Here's to 10 more new top projects in the next 10 years!
Thanks for the video, Jeff! So many awesome projects that the Pi can be used for. It really is one of the most versatile little computers. I'm partial to the RetroPie capabilities. 😉
Can I offer another suggestion? One of the pi's I love most is my time PI. I have a lot of PI's, and I run various services, most of which are very dependent on a precise time. The PI is not great at keeping time, some of them building a time skew of a few seconds over the course of an hour. It would be all great if you could ALWAYS sync time with the internet, but as I found out, when internet fails, the time starts failing and then everything fails. To get around this, I have a specific PI only to keep the time. It uses a GPS device to get the time independent of the internet, and runs a ntp (network time protocol) server for every other equipment that needs that. I know it's simple, but very useful as well.
i think it was several Years (almost a Decade) ago when i toyed around with some 433Mhz Radio transmitter to remotely turn on the light in our old Chicken barn with is used as Storage in our Garden for all kinds Utensils. But nothing more than a Fun-Side-Project.... Fast forward ~ 10 Years and every Raspberry i ever owned is sitting right next to some kind of Screen ...KODI'ing his Life away :) Last month you got me totally hooked on the Home Automation Hub...mainly because the Ecosystem for Homeautomation has obviously greatly improved. The "Yellow" seams like the right Gadget to get back into Home Automation. And for this...i Wanted to thank you. I don't know if i ever would had noticed this fine peace of Equipment without you. Thanks a lot...you single-handedly (re)ignited the "Pi-spark" in my Heart :)
I’d love a video on how many different things you can run on a single pi. For example, say you have pihole set up, what else could you run on that pi so it’s use can be maximised?
Loved the video Jeff as always! I have one single Raspi 4 running my home assistant for my full house, an Apache server, a file server and even a wireguard VPN server. The board has never failed to surprise me. Love it, and ofcourse love your content!
Thank you Jeff! I have been tinkering with Pi's for a few years - Recently have been running some fun projects on my 4B - And I always seem to end up on your videos during my research - thank you!
Your No.1 in the list i.e Pi-Hole was perfectly right I am using Pi Hole on my old Pi 3B+ for more than 2 years and it's working great and it's awesome
Another use for an older Pi (in my case a 1B): An SSH client into another computer. Mine SSHs into my Windows desktop, into a folder of one letter batch files that do things like change the RGB lighting via OpenRGB. Though this is really only useful if you've got room for another keyboard (I had an partial one sitting around collecting dust)
Why not just buy a cheap BT slim-line mini Mac knock-off Chinese keyboard from eBay, they're only £12 and work great with a Raspberry...plug and play supported with the USB BT transceiver. Or you can get a Raspberry Pi 400 which I have which is actually built inside its own well made mini keyboard with a ton of ports on the back!
I have 3 pis, a 4 running home assistant (with Adguard instead of pihole for ease of install), a zero 2W running my 3d printer and another 4 as a microscope (openflexure) and omv
Oh shoot, I completely forgot OctoPrint-that would've probably hit my top 10 list too... next time. I forgot about it because after I set it up it just became the standard way for me to think about how 3D printers are run :D
@@shockwaverc1369 And? Clearly he knows what it takes to fund his business and maybe he thinks every one of those revenue streams. If you pay on Flpatplane they snip out all internal sponsor spots.
Of course the arguments are more nuanced, and Linus probably regrets the specific choice of words, but it's still an important and ongoing discussion in the tech industry. Maybe we can someday get back control of our privacy on the Internet.
I didn't know about Pi-Hole before watching this video, so when he mentioned that in the Red Shirt, I got a bit scared 😂 HBD Pi Foundation! Long live your little boards!
To add to this list, I'm going to suggest Volumio or MoodeAudio. They allow you to make a local or streaming music box which you can hook up to an existing audio system or stand alone
1 year ago I did not know what raspberry is (except in the yogurt). Today I am "checking" 7 of your top 10 in my house already ;-) Adding 1 more: DAC - a converter of digital to analogue audio - 3 pieces in my house as well ;-)
I can highly recommend Pi-Hole, worthy 1st palce - even filters out malicious phishing DNS-queries and if a typo sneaks in while entering a domain: also secured xD Heck even running it as a recursive DNS-server improved my life. (If it only would have a DHCPv6 which can function as a statefull DHCPv6 Server ^^')
@@SodaWithoutSparkles Yes but sadly SLAAC and RA onöy - but in this case the host generates its IPv6 by its own with the help of RAs. With a stateful DHCPv6 the DHCP keeps records of Gateway, DNS and IPv6 Addresses of the hosts.
I think we need a hardware suggestion for Pi Hole don't we? If I am going to put this between my cable modem and the rest of my network don't I want an RP4 with 2 Ethernet ports? I'm not anxious to use a USB-to-Ethernet adapter, but will if I have to. I'm a big fan of this project as #1 on your list.
@Mark Knecht I have it on an RPI4, and it works fine so far. DNS queries and DHCP requests are not taking too much bandwith/throughput (even on a GE interface) so there's no need for a second interface (it will not replace your router - it does not support / has a WAN function).
Hey -- I love your content, and am an architect turned programmer. I would be really grateful if you can upload all these projects and share them using a playlist. I am honestly very excited for raspberry pi 5, and think can do a lot with it. Your work is greatly appreciated. Thanks!!
Always been a fan of the Pi since it came out. The original Pi A & B and same for Pi 2 were a little tricky. The Pi 2 rebooted with a camera flash that they decided wasn't a fault but a science lesson. They have came a long way and all from Pi 3 have been great products. Not sold on the Pico when ESP32 exists.
Growing up my dad always got rasp Pi's for projects, but would get too busy with work. Plan on setting up some of these for him to look at next time he stops by! Thanks for these!
I am so glad I have just come across this channel, you are both incredibly well spoken and clearly knowledgeable. I look forward to seeing the rest of the content you provide, subscribed.
5:55 lol shots fired. i block ads to revenge on google ads sense for unjustly banned my adsense account.... more than a decade ago. they claimed i cheated with fraud clicks... which i didn't do.
Ugh, I know many, many people who were banned in that same era (also unjustified)-I'm convinced their anti-cheat algorithm back then had a flaw, and it basically nixed many people's aspirations to build their blogs/sites. But it did teach an important lesson: don't ever build something relying solely on 3rd party ad revenue!
Happy birthday, Raspberry Pi! 🎉 Check out their new 'History of Raspberry Pi' video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-eiwm5TMHIy8.html And check out the 'I block ads' shirt and some other fun designs on redshirtjeff: redshirtjeff.com/ All proceeds from sales of that shirt will be donated to relief for Ukraine 🇺🇦
In the video you mentioned youtube premium to support creators. How does a premium subscription impact creators? I have premium but was not aware it affected channels individually (I mostly have it because youtube ads have become unbearable).
Time flies! I was quite busy with our kids (who were infants/toddlers) when the Pi was announced and kind of brushed it aside thinking it might be more applicable in industrial applications (which it seemed to be target to in the early days). Little did I know that I would be hooked onto this little device a few months later when I picked one up from someone locally and ended up by building a rudimentary home automation system to monitor temperature/humidity in the bedroom and turn on a humidifier for my younger child who was prone to bloody noses. I have since gone on to implement pretty much every project (except Retro-gaming) in this video and even built a cloud based environmental monitoring system for my research lab that uses off-the-shelf (SEEED, etc.) as well as custom environmental (air quality, temp, humidity etc etc.) sensors to monitor indoor environmental conditions anywhere in the world and send the data to our cloud infrastructure for real time (and post) analytics in support of the various studies (including Covid-19 related) that our lab scientists/researchers might be working on. What a ride! In fact, my younger one (the same who suffered from nose bleeds), couple years back was also intrigued by the Pi and we started by building the Google AIY Voice Kit with the Pi and she has since gone on to write her own apps and won awards as part of her elementary school's Technovation team. Sorry for the long post but who would have thought this tiny device (which I had brushed aside initially) would make (learning about) computing so ubiquitous and fun for kids and grownup kids alike. Happy 10th Birthday, Pi! Great video as always, Jeff! (Looking forward to the security related Pi videos you mentioned in this videos).
@@jon1913 When a Premium subscriber watches a video on my channel, I end up getting about the same cut from that view as I would for an ad spot, so it's basically a way to have supporters not have to see any ads, and creators still to get some revenue from playback.
I used to be a faithful customer of the popcorn hour for years. But eventually I got frustrated with how often the hardware would fail. On my second need to replace the PSU, i threw in the towel and built an OSMC server on an old RPI2 I had. I've been using my OSMC on RPI2 now for almost 4 years, and couldn't be happier. In my opinion, it was an upgrade.
It's definitely an honorable mention-but a bit more niche, which is why it didn't make the list. I also neglected to add in OctoPrint, which I've used continuously for quite some time!
I know this is sarcastic but I feel like the toughest project for Pi in 2022 is actually finding a couple to purchase to use for some of these awesome projects
Okay I randomly came across 2 of your videos today so figured I better subscribe. First your ratcheting screwdriver video, then I search Raspberry Pi Projects and there you are again!
Thanks, good vid! Just to quote, Eben Upton says there's a "Factor of 40 performance difference" between an original Pi and a Pi 4. Whatever that really means (40x, or factorial 40, who knows!). Quoted from the Pi Foundations blog post, video on the page - Celebrating 10 years of Raspberry Pi with a new museum exhibition.
@@JeffGeerling Yes, definitely a bit difficult to measure - btw, the article is "Happy Birthday to us" blog post, not the celebrating article I wrote originally. Video is titled 'History of Raspberry Pi", This is our story. I'm from the UK and am seriously thinking of going down to the Bletchley park celebrations in March!
I was one of the first customers in UK to get my hands on the first generation Raspberry Pi! I remember the demand was so high there was actually a waiting list I had to join before it finally arrived after waiting months...I opted for a fully enclosed one with the genuine Raspberry Pi white case. The original model had just 256MB RAM and there was a model B 512MB version as I recall which came out shortly after. Fast forward since then, a couple of months ago I spotted a practically brand new Raspberry Pi 400 which has a whopping 4GB RAM and some accessories including a 7" enclosed LCD panel retailing for just £59.99 (about $67) in a store that sells used electronic gadgets. I quickly snapped it up and brought it home to see what I'd bought.. interestingly the 400 model is built INSIDE a very nice quality keyboard with a load of ports on it and an official Raspberry Pi mouse! The LCD panel is unusual and doesn't seem to be made by Raspberry and is some generic Chinese thing...nevertheless it works well with the Raspberry Pi 400 connecting to the keyboard via HDMI cable supplied. Crystal clear sharp HD display which is also handy for uses like a CCTV monitor panel and its wall mountable and unusually even has a standard tripod mount on the bottom. I don't particularlly like the standard Raspberry Pi OS and it's really aimed at people wanting to learn programming and/or use a Raspberry as a controller for electronic devices or projects. For me they make ideal low-cost low-power mini development or failover servers for hosting stuff and I prefer to use the ARM versions of Linux from Ubuntu and other distro's with mine.
Best Pi project to date... running a Flux cumulus node! Fun project to set up, good to learn about blockchain tech, not too complicated to get set up, and it provides 26% APR, brutal, I have various set up and I couldn't be happier!
HBD to Raspberry Pi! I always love your video sharing about RPi-related things, and these content really help a lot! It's so amazing that I have tried half of the projects you list though I had zero knowledge about programming, linux and any open source software before I met RPi at the first sight. I totally agree that even though RP is not that powerful, it truly is a great start point for learners and beginners! I am trying out Pi Cluster project right now, and I hope I can soon learn new things about kubernetes. It is really exciting! Glad and thrilled to see more Pi-related contents get shared!
I pay for premium and also have many channels I sponsor. Ads give me an instant aneurysm, which is not doctor recommended, and I appreciate good content so don't mind directly paying.
If you have access to a 3d printer and have a micro or telescope the picam can make a great camera for either. Made an adapter and have been doing timelapse microscopy for a month or so now