Hello, world! The MagPi has a new website
By Russell Barnes. Posted
Welcome to The MagPi's new-look website designed to accompany the official Raspberry Pi magazine
Advertisement
Get started with Raspberry Pi – everything you need to know to start your journey!
It's been a long time coming, but our all-new website for The MagPi is now live! We've built this site from the ground up to help you keep up to date with all things MagPi and Raspberry Pi.
We hope you'll make use of the two most asked for features on the site – an RSS feed and a newsletter sign-up, so you can get a notification every time we update the site and release a new issue. Get the magazine straight in your inbox or notified by your favourite RSS reader.
As before you can find every issue of The MagPi ever made as free PDF downloads – check out the back issues link in the menu bar above to see all 40 of them.
We've also made it easier than ever to get hold of the magazine in print and for your favourite Android and Apple devices. While we love you downloading the magazine (you've grabbed different issues 500,000 times since March!), we'd love it if you could buy or subscribe to the magazine.
Like sales of The Raspberry Pi itself, every penny of profit from magazine sales goes to supporting the Raspberry Pi Foundation's charitable mission to democratise computing and help people from all walks of life and from all over the world get a taste of programming.
Enjoy the website!
Russell
Russell runs Raspberry Pi Press, which includes The MagPi, Hello World, HackSpace magazine, and book projects. He’s a massive sci-fi bore.
Subscribe to Raspberry Pi Official Magazine
Save up to 37% off the cover price and get a FREE Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W with a subscription to Raspberry Pi Official Magazine.
More articles
Get started with Raspberry Pi in Raspberry Pi Official Magazine 161
There’s loads going on in this issue: first of all, how about using a capacitive touch board and Raspberry Pi 5 to turn a quilt into an input device? Nicola King shows you how. If you’re more into sawing and drilling than needlework, Jo Hinchliffe has built an underwater rover out of plastic piping and […]
Read more →
Win one of three DreamHAT+ radars!
That’s right, an actual working radar for your Raspberry Pi. We reviewed it a few months ago and have since been amazed at some of the projects that have used it, like last month’s motion sensor from the movie Aliens. Sound good? Well we have a few to give away, and you can enter below. […]
Read more →
RP2350 Pico W5 review
It’s Raspberry Pi Pico 2, but with a lot more memory
Read more →