Archive: https://archive.today/C3KZF
From the post:
>Maker Aiden Chostner has designed a PCI Express graphics card that you can build yourself — though expectations as to its performance must be tempered by the understanding that it's powered by a Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W microcontroller board, albeit one that's been heavily overclocked.
"Recently, I began exploring circuit design, and I liked the idea of creating my own custom graphics card because it sounded like a fun project," Chostner explains. "After some back and forth of choosing requirements for the GPU, I settled on using a Raspberry Pi Pico [2 W] as the main processor. It already had a graphics library made for it, which would make adding HDMI support simple. I saw PicoDVI by Luke Wren, but I wanted to add more RAM and some extra capabilities."
Archive: https://archive.today/C3KZF
From the post:
>>Maker Aiden Chostner has designed a PCI Express graphics card that you can build yourself — though expectations as to its performance must be tempered by the understanding that it's powered by a Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W microcontroller board, albeit one that's been heavily overclocked.
"Recently, I began exploring circuit design, and I liked the idea of creating my own custom graphics card because it sounded like a fun project," Chostner explains. "After some back and forth of choosing requirements for the GPU, I settled on using a Raspberry Pi Pico [2 W] as the main processor. It already had a graphics library made for it, which would make adding HDMI support simple. I saw PicoDVI by Luke Wren, but I wanted to add more RAM and some extra capabilities."
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