![]() This was done long before I got my own printer, using the (now retired, I understand) Uprint at the local makerspace. With the new 'HQ' camera, 12mp, they should be extremely good.Īnd, those who are observant may notice that the texture of the case is not that from a Prusa. It just uses a script to execute raspistill every so many seconds. This was using a legacy Pi Zero and the first-generation Pi Cam (5mp, IIRC) and in good light the photos are indeed very good. This is currently outdated and unmaintained. We used to offer PrusaPrint, a custom build for the Raspberry Pi Zero. So, you can either use the Latest And Greatest and put up with some bumps in the road, or the legacy applications, which are known to be stable and robust.Īnd if anyone is scoffing at the idea of using a Pi for some semi-serious photography, a few years ago I made a time-lapse spy camera from plans that were being passed around at our local makerspace and I was impressed with the quality of the photos. However, the Raspberry Pi Zero is not powerful enough to utilize advanced Octoprint features and plugins, like video streaming, and is officially not recommended by the Octoprint project. They are transitioning to the Linux libcamera library for camera support in lieu of the Pi-specific camera stack. ![]() The work-around, if you can even call it that, is to use or continue to use the last-generation 'Buster' release of the OS until they get things sorted out. ![]() IIAC, those camera issues ONLY affect units that use the Latest And Greatest 'Bullseye' release of the OS, on ANY pi, and are not related to the Pi Zero 2w specifically. ![]()
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