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This DIY system is made of an infrared touch frame, a two-way mirror, and an HDMI monitor, outfitted with several other main components (Raspberry Pi 4, camera, Amazon Alexa speaker, and some LED ...
The open-source project uses a Raspberry Pi with WiFi and either an HDMI monitor or a monitor that the Pi can drive (e.g., a VGA with an HDMI adapter). You are probably thinking: Why not just let ...
The frame not only adds aesthetic value but also provides structural support for the components. The use of a Raspberry Pi Zero W, a wireless low-powered mini PC, ensures that the smart mirror is ...
We’ve seen a few different magic mirror projects using a Raspberry Pi, but in the newest issue of MagPi they’ve put together what might as well be the definitive magic mirror guide as it’s ...
A clever maker took a Raspberry Pi 4 Model B and built a smart mirror with touch support and facial recognition.
It takes a two way mirror, stuffs a monitor behind it, and then powers the whole thing with a Raspberry Pi running in Chromium’s kiosk mode.
Then you enclose a monitor in a wooden frame, and attach the monitor to your mirror. Finally, you get the software running on a raspberry pi, and put it behind the monitor.
The Raspberry Pi version by [Dylan] puts a 27″ monitor behind the mirror. That is either terribly impressive or way over the top but seeing Linux boot behind the mirror makes it worth the effort.
If you want a high-quality, highly customizable digital photo frame, you can build one using Raspberry Pi. Here's how to do it.
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