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Over on his YouTube channel the vivacious [Stephen Hawes] tells us that we never need to buy solder stencils again! A big ...
In the retrocomputing world, [DosDude1] is a name spoken with more than a little respect. He’s back again with a long-awaited ...
Remy van Elst] found an obsolete bike navigation system, the Navman Bike 1000, in a thrift store for €10. The device was a ...
We’ve been loving the variety of entries to the 2025 One-Hertz Challenge. Many a clock has been entered, to be sure, but also ...
You can get cheap no-brand macropads for almost nothing now. Some of them have just a couple of keys. Others have lots of ...
Humans have long admired the sound of birdsong, but to fully appreciate how technically amazing it is, you need an ultrasonic ...
Setting up a file server can be intimidating to the uninitiated. There are many servers to choose from, and then you need to decide how to install it — Docker? Kubernates? Well, what’s ...
We like cyberdecks here at Hackaday, and in our time we’ve brought you some pretty amazing builds. But perhaps now we’ve seen the ultimate of the genre, a cyberdeck so perfect in its ...
From the outside, iron meteorites tend to look like formless, rusted lumps of metal, which is why museums often polish and etch sections to show their interior structure. This reveals their ...
The HP 115BR is not one of the most well-known products from Hewlett-Packard. And yet, it was remarkably important ...
Our hacker [Wil Carver] has sent in his submission for the One Hertz Challenge: Precise Time Ref via 1 Pulse-Per-Second GPS ...
Although often glossed over, the human liver is a pretty amazing organ. Not just because it’s pretty much the sole thing that ...
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