Hackaday (RSS Feed)'s avatar
Hackaday (RSS Feed)
https://hackaday.com/feed/@atomstr.data.haus
npub1hd8a...zv06
Fresh hacks every day https://hackaday.com
Playing DOOM on a Receipt Printer <img width="800" height="450" src="image alt="a torn-up printer with a very long image of different frames"/>Gaming is a wonderful thing. Unfortunately for many of us, work takes up our valuable time, which should be allocated to our gaming. What if there was a better way?
Active Ideal Full Bridge Rectifier using TEA2208T <img width="800" height="380" src="image alt=""/>Everyone loves a full-wave bridge rectifier, but there’s no denying that they aren’t 100% efficient due to the diode voltage drop. Which isn’t to say that with some effort we
Print Your Next LED Bezel <img width="799" height="449" src="image alt=""/>LED bezels (also known as LED panel-mount holders) are great, so how about 3D printing the next ones you need? Sure, they’re inexpensive to purchase and not exactly uncommon. But
Building a Wall-Mounted Sound Visualizer <img width="800" height="451" src="image alt=""/>Visualizers used to be very much in vogue, something you’d gasp in at amazement when you’d fire up Winamp or Windows Media Player. They’re largely absent from our modern lives,
Simulating Driven-Dissipative Quantum Spin Dynamics on Consumer Hardware <img width="800" height="294" src="image alt=""/>Physics simulations using classical mechanics is something that’s fairly easily done on regular consumer hardware, with real-time approximations a common feature in video games. Moving things to the quantum realm
Mini Battery-Powered Vapor-Compression Air Conditioner <img width="800" height="478" src="image alt=""/>When you think of air conditioners, you tend to think of rather bulky units, with the window-mounted appliances probably among the most compact. There’s however no real minimum size limit
Pocket-sized Test Pattern Generator Helps Check those CRTs <img width="800" height="449" src="image alt=""/>[Nicholas Murray]’s Composite Test Pattern Generator is a beautifully-made, palm-sized tool that uses an ESP32-based development board to output different test patterns in PAL/NTSC. If one is checking out old
Retrotechtacular: IBM’s The World of OCR <img width="800" height="487" src="image alt=""/>Optical Character Recognition (OCR) forms the bridge between the analog world of paper and the world of machines. The modern-day expectation is that when we point a smartphone camera at
NVIDIA Drops Pascal Support on Linux, Causing Chaos on Arch Linux <img width="800" height="533" src="image alt=""/>It’s no surprise that NVIDIA is gradually dropping support for older videocards, with the Pascal (GTX 10xx) GPUs most recently getting axed. What’s more surprising is the terrible way that
PC Watercooling Uses Everything But CNC Machining <img width="800" height="450" src="image alt=""/>Names and labels are difficult. Take this “3D Printed” water-cooling loop by [Visual Thinker] on YouTube. It undeniably uses 3D printing — but it also uses silicone casting and laser-cut
FibreSeeker 3: Continuous Carbon Fiber vs Chopped CF <img width="800" height="409" src="image alt=""/>Although you can purchase many types of FDM filaments containing ‘carbon fiber’ these days, they are in no way related to the carbon fiber (CF) composite materials used for rocket
Born to Burn: the Battle Born LFP Battery <img width="800" height="457" src="image alt=""/>Would you feel confident in buying US-made LiFePO4 (LFP) batteries? While the answer here is generally expected to be ‘yes’, especially compared to getting an unbranded LFP battery off eBay
Twelve Days of Christmas as Performed By 1980s Speech Chip <img width="800" height="450" src="image alt=""/>In a curious historical twist, the “Twelve days of Christmas” are actually the days of revelry that followed the 25th. The preceding period, Advent, was traditionally a fast, not unlike