Monday, February 2, 2026

Meme Monday: Raspberry Pi Memes

For all of my years puttering around computers and IT, I've never built a Raspberry Pi.

Until now.

I built one to power what's known as a Hamclock* that amateur radio hobbyists use to keep an eye on contact listings, what amateur radio bands are open (it's a shortwave/High Frequency thing, just roll with it) and what solar activity is.

Oh, and it has a nice graphic of the earth showing parts of the earth that are in daylight or night:

This is DL1GKK's Hamclock, which looks much
more detailed that the graphic I have. From DL1GKK.

Geochron makes those as well, but the digital ones cost $500 and the physical machines cost much more than that. My Hamclock is basically the cost of the Raspberry Pi, parts to put it together, and a spare monitor and/or keyboard + mouse.

Anyway, I figured I'd put Raspberry Pi in this week's Meme Monday.

Okay, let's get the low-hanging fruit
out of the way. See what I did there?
From Instagram.

And yes, this is another popular meme type.
From ifunny.co.

When the most current powerful version
of the Raspberry Pi came out, the Raspberry
Pi 5, it was a bit difficult to find one in stock
at first.  From Zuyun Zeng.


Again, unless you're in the know (and
you are now) this would kind of make sense.
From Memedroid.


Apparently Raspberry Pi enthusiasts are a bit
excited about their hobby. From Memedroid.


But just like any other electronics project, you
can go down the multi-week rabbit hole
when you start on a new Raspberry Pi project.
From imgflip via Medium.


*Because of course ham radio would be involved.


2 comments:

  1. I've thought about getting a Raspberry Pi, but I don't have any project that would need one. I hope it is a lot of fun and a long-term pleasure for you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You know, I look at this thing and I realize it's probably more powerful than a 486 or an OG Pentium, and I just kind of cry a little inside.

      For the record, here's the pricing for the stuff (from Microcenter):

      Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W: $15
      Micro Connectors Raspberry Pi Zero and Zero 2 W Starter Case Kit: $18
      Raspberry Pi USB 3.0 Hub USB C: $15

      The Starter Case Kit included a micro HDMI to HDMI adapter, a small power supply , a micro USB to USB adapter, a small screwdriver, a few heatsinks, a HAT pin connector you can solder to your Pi Zero (I didn't need that), and a small acrylic case you can put together for the Zero or Zero 2 W. Considering the price of those items individually, all that for $18 is really nice.

      I had a 32 GB micro SD card that I used to flash the Pi OS onto, and from that point I was operating on the Pi itself. If you're at all used to LINUX/UNIX the commands are familiar.

      Delete