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I bought this in 2012, shortly after the Raspberry Pi was officially launched. This is one of the first "batch", made in China (not long afterwards, production moved to south Wales, where it remains) - the machine is housed in a custom enclosure ("PiHouse"?).
The item connected to the GPIO pins, is a USB-TTL converter for making a serial "console" connection with a terminal emulator.
I blink twice in this video, once on an Arduino Mega, and again on a Raspberry PI Zero. You can too! It's easy. Follow along and check out the links in the description of the video. Subscribe to my channel while you are there. youtu.be/CKKaRj9UX50
Optical time-lapse video from a Raspberry PI
Hostname: xenon
Run Time: 1435383610
Sunrise: 2015-06-27 04:41:24.000005
Sunset: 2015-06-27 22:37:33.000005
delta: 8.97 seconds
Captured Time: 2015-06-27 22:38:39.896724
Youtube: youtu.be/BAfPXNRvUo0 (higher resolution and nicer playback)
I managed a stall showing off the Raspberry Pi, Arduino and Shrimping kits to the teachers, students and general public.
In HackSpace magazine issue 5 Limor Fried of Adafruit teaches us what it takes to make great hardware. We also find out everything there is to know about LEDs, convert a Dremel into a table saw and much more:
The button layout is based upon the Sanwa layout from the Slagcoin website. These are 1:1 scale drawings of the left and right sides of the control panel printed on A3 paper at work and used as templates. I stuck them to the control panel with PVA glue and drilled pilot holes before the glue dried. Once I removed the templates, I could them drill the full sized holes.