Don’t you just hate it when dev boards have some annoying little quirk that makes them harder to use than they should be? Take the ESP32-CAM, a board that started appearing on the market in ...
An undocumented set of low-level commands has been discovered in the ESP32 microchip, a widely used component in IoT devices.
This AI vision camera is built around an ESP32-CAM module, the setup also includes an OLED screen, a buzzer for notifications ...
Lurks in its Bluetooth firmware Espressif’s popular ESP32 microchip, found in over a billion devices, has been caught with ...
Right now that’s Espressif’s ESP32-P4 ... it drives a large touchscreen and a camera. There are two MIPI DSI/CSI ports on the PCB, as well as three USB ports and a sound codec.
ESP-SparkBot is a compact AI-powered robot built on the ESP32-S3, offering voice interaction, image recognition, and ...
ESP32, manufactured by a Chinese company called ... Attackers would need physical access to the smart device’s USB or UART interface, or they would need to have already compromised the firmware ...
The FlyingCam, created by Sebastian Duell, is a portable camera solution. The project uses an IKEA lamp's arm and an ESP32 for easy setup. The camera has a 14-hour battery life and can be connected ...