News

The Raspberry Pi Camera Module 3 variants. Green are standard, black are infrared. And it's implied that this photo is showing off some of the HDR prowess of the new Camera Module 3 itself.
Raspberry Pi Camera Module 3 succeeds the 2016 Camera Module 2, but now comes with a 11.9 megapixel (MP) Sony sensor rather than the former model's 8.1 MP Sony sensor.
If you're a Raspberry Pi fan, perhaps you'll appreciate this little bit of history: the Camera Module was its first-ever accessory. With it, you can make security cameras and have all sorts of fun ...
Raspberry Pi and Sony have co-developed a $70 Raspberry Pi AI Camera module that can help Raspberry Pi users to develop “edge AI solutions that process visual data.” ...
When Raspberry Pi became a public company, it reported that the industrial and embedded segment represented 72% of its sales. That ratio is likely going to be even higher for the AI Camera. I ...
Raspberry Pi has just launched the Camera Module 3 Sensor Assembly for just $15. It's essentially the same as the Camera Module 3, but for smaller projects.
As with past Raspberry Pi camera sensors, the foundation worked with Sony on the new module. It's based on the IMX708, an 11.9MP sensor (4608×2592 resolution) with 1.4μm pixel pitch.
Raspberry Pi is launching the Camera Module 3. Its upgraded Sony IMX708 sensor is higher resolution, but perhaps more important is that the new module supports high dynamic range photography and ...
The Raspberry Pi AI Camera can run images through AI workloads, but it's not the fastest. It can capture 10 frames per second at the full resolution, or you can use the 2x2 pixel binning mode to ...
The original Camera Module, released in May 2013, was Raspberry Pi's first official single-board computer (SBC) accessory; capable of producing 640-by-480-pixel, 720p, and 1,080p video, it was ...
In more technical terms, the AI Camera is based on a Sony image sensor (the IMX500) paired with a RP2040, Raspberry Pi’s own microcontroller chip with on-chip SRAM.Like the rest of the line-up ...
Raspberry Pi, the company that sells tiny, cheap, single-board computers, is releasing an add-on that is going to open up several use cases — and yes, because it's 2024, there's an AI angle.