The ben heck show raspberry pi

        1. The ben heck show raspberry pi
        2. In this project the Ben Heck team creates an all-in-one desktop oscilloscope using a Raspberry Pi, a Bitscope usb oscilloscope, and a 7"....

          Web Portal for Benjamin J Heckendorn

          You don’t seem to respond to the element14 forum, so I’m copying what I said on http://www.element14.com/community/thread/19022?tstart=50 here:

          Hi,

          I downloaded the zip and was quite diappointed.

          Firstly, it consists mainly of data sheets.

          Win Ben's Atari 2600 Portable!

        3. Watch as they use the Raspberry Pi Compute Module and a Formlabs SLA 3D printer to create their own graphing calculator.
        4. In this project the Ben Heck team creates an all-in-one desktop oscilloscope using a Raspberry Pi, a Bitscope usb oscilloscope, and a 7".
        5. Join the makers and engineers of element14 presents as they tackle fun and interesting projects each week using circuitry design, 3D printing, microcontrollers.
        6. The evil Pie Face plans to turn the world to crust, special agent Ben Bondendorf must stop him.
        7. The file ENG_CD_147490_G.pdf has a couple of schematics that are pretty meaningless. There isn’t even a README file.

          Lastly, and most importantly, the critical file with the case layout is an Adobe Ilustrator file!

          I really don’t think that the kind of people that this project will appeal to will want to pay over 500 units of the local currency in order to see the plans of this case.

          Yes, I assume that there may exist plenty of places in the USA that have wood/laser cutter services and you expect anyone picking up this file to simply send it on to one of these, but what about people who do not have such access, and merely want to look at the plans in order to adapt/replicate in other ways?

          Could you provide the plans in a more industry standard importable form so that, e.g.

          ske