If you’re planning on working satellites or doing any sort of RF work where the signal lives down in the dirt, you’re going to need a low-noise amplifier. That’s typically not a problem, as ...
We say this with the greatest respect, but [Joel] — your exercise routine is horrible! Kudos for getting up and doing something, but 108 trips up and down the stairs? That sounds like torture ...
A little while ago Oasis was showcased on social media, billing itself as the world’s first playable “AI video game” that ...
[Classic Microcomputers] read in a book that there was a computer-generated film made in the late 1960s, and he knew he had to watch it. He found it and shared it along with some technical ...
We’ll go out on a limb here and say that a large portion of Hackaday readers are also boat-builders. That’s a bold statement, ...
Retro computing enthusiasts, rejoice! HIDman, [rasteri]’s latest open source creation, bridges the gap between modern USB input devices and vintage PCs, from the IBM 5150 to machines with ...
We just got home from Supercon and well, it was super. It was great to see everyone, and meet a whole bunch of new folks to boot! The talks were great, and you can see a good half of them already ...
Michael Lynch]’s adventures in configuring Nix to automate fuzz testing is a lot of things all rolled into one. It’s not only ...
A characteristic of any thermal power plant — whether using coal, gas or spicy nuclear rocks — is that they have a closed ...
Generally when assuming a chaotic (i.e. random) system like an undirected graph, we assume that if we start coloring these (i ...