It might not look like much, but Charlie Galliher's entry is a picture of his last 8th grade Raspberry Pi class. "It's a Raspberry Pi tied to helium balloons tethered to the ground," he explains. His students built the operating system, made and ran the camera code, and downloaded the images — all in real time.
Mike Cook on his microscopic photo: "Ever seen two plants having sex? The Spirogyia does. Here are two exchanging packets of cells. Note it is a s'Pi'rogyia."
Matt Inglis ran a wedding photobooth using just a camera and a Raspberry Pi.
Tommy Mintz used a Python program he created along with a Raspberry Pi computer and a RasPi camera to take this photo, a still from "Animation of the Automated Digital Photo Collage at Pier 62 #9."
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis Lego-inspired picture was taken by James Mitchell from Berlin Germany.
"Pictures taken with Raspberry Pi NoiR and the normal camera," said runner-up Artur Glogowski.
Cristian Braüchy's Star Wars-themed photo nabbed him a runner-up spot.
Jay Langhurst's runner-up entry "Garden at Dusk" fittingly includes a raspberry plant, though it's covered in snow.
This bird-themed photo snagged Etienne Cochon a runner-up spot in the contest.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe grand prize winner, Andrew Mulholland, on his photo: "Here is my entry. It is a panorama taking robot made out of Lego and a Raspberry Pi with a camera module."
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