There are some times when a picture, or better yet a video, really is worth a thousand words, and [heinz]’s dual-disk polar 3D printer is one of those projects. Perhaps the best way to describe it ...
If you’ve been following the hubbub about 3I/ATLAS, you’re probably either in the camp that thinks it’s just a comet from ...
Every Boy Scout or Girl Guide probably had the experience of building a simple solar oven: an insulated box, some aluminum ...
The spectrum of laser technologies available to hackers has gradually widened from basic gas lasers through CO2 tubes, diode ...
The Raspberry Pi Pico is a very capable board, but it’s still a surprise to see bit-banged 100 MBit/s Fast Ethernet implemented on one. [Steve]’s Pico-100BASE-TX library allows an ...
The advent of the mobile phone camera has caused a revolution in film making over the last couple of decades, lowering the barrier to entry significantly, and as the cameras have improved, ...
Over on YouTube [Matt Brown] hacks a Chinese security camera recently banned by the US government. If you didn’t hear about this you can find out more over here: Major US online retailers ...
As any generation of people get older, they tend to look back fondly on their formative years when there was less responsibility and more wonder. Even if things have objectively improved, we often ...
Switching power supplies are familiar to Hackaday readers, whether they have a fairly conventional transformer, are a buck, a ...
F5 is unintentionally dabbling in releasing the source code behind their BIG-IP networking gear, announcing this week that an ...
It was Elliot and Dan on the podcast today, taking a look at the best the week had to offer in terms of your hacks. We ...
Bismuth is known for a few things: its low melting point, high density, and psychedelic hopper crystals. A literal deep-dive ...
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