- The cyanometer, an antique instrument to measure blueness of the sky.
(Here is how to make your own.) - Make a Mini NeXT Raspberry Pi case
- Miss Flyer: A laser cut misprint to paper airplane converter
- Gravitational waves: The first six detections as 3D-printable models
- Gunnel (gunwale) pumping: A way to propel a canoe without paddles
- Buffalo Waterfront Museum of Vintage Label Makers
- Planetary orbits for the Heliocentric and Geocentric systems visualized
- Inside the 76477 Space Invaders sound effect chip by Ken Shirriff
- World Record Stack of Waffles
- What are those crystals in hard cheeses?
- The curious case of the Apollo 4 Earth images
Category Archives: Everything Else
Linkdump: April 2018
- Dynamic Müller-Lyer Illusion
- Could Venus have a bacterial infection?
- How the bones in your hand change as you grow up
- Could a Neuroscientist Understand a Microprocessor? Probing a simulated 6502 and evaluating it like a set of neurons
- A Sinclair Scientific Calculator Emulator that you can build
- A LaTeX package to add coffee stains
- Diffraction gratings, now in chocolate (YouTube, via Hackaday)
- LED Snailies?
- Precise Parts: Custom machined adapters for astronomy
- Sam Zeloof lithographically builds an amplifier IC in his garage
- An Exploration into 3D Printing on Pre-stretched Fabric
Linkdump: March 2018
- Quick Sort explained by IDEA instructions
- Daytime fireworks are a thing. (Second example.)
- An air breathing electric motor for low earth orbit satellites
- Automatic Machine Knitting of 3D Meshes
- How two photographers captured the same millisecond in time
- 8-bit emergency kit
- Urgent Need To Be Remembered, an anamorphic sculpture by Jonty Hurwitz
- A video showing the inside of an automatic mahjong table. Watch carefully to see how the tiles are flipped upright.
Linkdump: February 2018
- How Carob Traumatized a Generation
- How Christine Peterson coined the term ‘open source’
- OpenSC2K: An open source remake of SimCity 2000
- A deep dive into the history of the Automatic Pencil Sharpener Company (via @john_overholt)
- The ReCode Project is a community-driven effort to preserve computer art by translating it into a modern programming language
- Unfamiliar cat petting simulator
- The classic Handbook of Mathematical Functions by Abramowitz and Stegun has become the NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions.
- Fabric linear motor
- Your data, on an 8-inch floppy disk
- A new proposal for distant a space telescope, using the sun as a gravitational lens to observe exoplanets
- System Bus Radio: A program to transit AM radio from computers and phones without radio transmitting hardware
- Photos of the SF Bay Area, taken from a U2 at the edge of space
Linkdump: January 2018
- The Idiot’s Loop: Dropping a nuclear bomb with a backflip was a 1950’s US Air Force tactic.
- History of Philips’ Semiconductors in the 1950s
- Terry Gilliam reveals the secrets of Monty Python animation
- Vintage Computing for Trusted Radiation Measurements
- R.I.P. astronaut John Young, the first man to get yelled at for smuggling a sandwich into space
- Xerox Alto zero-day: cracking disk password protection on a 45 year old system
- The GRAY-1, “a homebrew CPU exclusively composed of memory”
- Modern JavaScript Explained For Dinosaurs
- BR9732: A virtual replica of Deckard’s apartment from Blade Runner
- MS Paint Enamel Pin. A Photoshop version is available as well.
- Fruit Tart Cat Bed (via Laughing Squid)
- Your candy wrappers are listening: Extracting audio from high-speed video of ordinary objects
- NASA’s IMAGE satellite — out of contact for 13 years — may have just been found awake by an amateur astronomer.
Linkdump: December 2017
- Computing a world of snowflakes
- 6 Animatronic Eye Mechanisms You Can Download and 3D Print
- Parafilm: What is this thing? (YouTube)
- The colorful modern history of ancient crookneck watermelons
- The Boldport Club is a monthly electronic kit subscription
- The mathematics of the game 2048
- Why do asteroids explode high in the atmosphere?
- Stromatolites found alive, on land
- Here’s The Important Reason We Don’t Get Mad Chemistry Kits For Christmas Any More
- Reading Silicon: How to Reverse Engineer Integrated Circuits, a talk by Ken Shirriff at the 2016 Hackaday SuperConference.
- A Gorgeous—and Unsettling—Video of Evolution in Action
- The Mathematics of Popping Champagne Corks (YouTube)
Linkdump: November 2017
- Fifty-three year old nuclear missile accident revealed
- Racetrack core sample: What 108 Years Of Repaving Looks Like Under Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s Asphalt
- The folks who make Generatively Designed Socks also made a Processing library for use with Google’s Quick, Draw! dataset
- MeatBagPnP – A tool to help you (the MeatBag) act as a pick and place machine
- Drawing from noise, and then making animated loopy GIFs from there.
- Usborne coding books, including some fantastic free-to-download 1980s computer books
- Micro Mouse: High speed robot mice solve mazes — No, the video isn’t sped up (YouTube).
- Kickstarting an all-new Vectrex Game Cartridge
Silicon Valley Hardware Meetup
We’re excited to be holding the Silicon Valley Hardware Meetup at our shop in Sunnyvale on Wednesday, December 6 from 6:30-9:30 pm. The event is hosted by Supplyframe and Tindie and will have food, drink, speakers and demo time. For full details and to RSVP, head to the event page.
Linkdump: October 2017
ARとは関係ないけれど、首都大学東京のブースで見たゴミ箱が未来かっこいい。
これは素材や仕上げをこだわって、高級路線で行けば売れると思う。欲しいです。#DCEXPO pic.twitter.com/nE5rlY291y— お休みさん@あんたまにあ (@zFdqQWPoR2tYmF7) October 29, 2017
- The cutest little ultrasonic iris trash can that you’ll ever see
- Minute physics on polarized filters and quantum mechanics
- CableEndy Cable-Driven Parallel Robot. (Bonus with tennis ball.)
- Pedro Medeiros is creating Pixel Art to tutorials on Patreon
- How the Soviet Union Snooped Waters for Enemy Subs—Without Sonar
- Primitive for macOS: Recreate your photos with vector-based geometric primitives.
- An interstellar visitor to our solar system
- Bunnie Studios: Why I’m Using Bitmarks on my Products
Lady Ada Lovelace Day 2017
For Lady Ada Day, we like to highlight some of the women we know who are doing amazing work in that group of fields bundled into the term STEAM. Here are a few:
- Leah Buechley, making algorithmic art
- Katherine Scott, working with Planet Labs and the Open Hardware Summit
- Charlene McBride, making art and working at Amazon
- Vanessa Julia Carpenter, designing for meaningfulness
- Anouk Wipprecht, rethinking fashion
- Sophi Kravitz, making art and working with Hackaday
- AnnMarie Thomas, bringing together engineering, education and play
Please join us today in celebrating the women in your lives who are building the world into something better, whether through science, technology, engineering, art or mathematics.