Using a tiny device called a Raspberry Shake, people around the world are tuning in to the earth’s vibrations. By Madeleine Morley Photographs by Peter Fisher Everything felt still while Marc Cesaire, ...
“It’s the trains!” Ryan Hollister yelled to his wife Laura as he burst into their home in Turlock, California. For two weeks in 2017, they’d been staring at data from their newly installed Raspberry ...
In the realm of seismology, the Raspberry Shake is making waves. Despite its diminutive size, this device is a powerful, professional-grade seismological instrument capable of recording earthquakes of ...
Watch the Earth’s vibrations live from your computer with the Raspberry Shake 4D. Watch the Earth’s vibrations live from your computer with the Raspberry Shake 4D. If you live in an earthquake danger ...
Research published in the journal Science, using a mix of professional and Raspberry Shake citizen seismic data, finds that lockdown measures to slow the spread of the virus COVID-19 reduced seismic ...
Raspberry Shake, the maker of an eponymous Raspberry Pi-based seismograph, has launched a new sensor that can pick up inaudible sound waves from earthquakes, landslides, or even the next SpaceX launch ...
Was that a tremor you just felt? You don’t have to be a seismologist to answer that question — not if you have the Raspberry Shake, that is. Branded as a “professional-grade personal seismograph” that ...
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