Hackaday Podcast 113: Python Switching to Match, a Magnetic Dyno, a Flying Dino, and a Spinning Sequencer

Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams recap a week of great hacks. You won’t want to miss the dynamometer Leo Fernekes built to measure the power output of his …read more Continue reading Hackaday Podcast 113: Python Switching to Match, a Magnetic Dyno, a Flying Dino, and a Spinning Sequencer

Hackaday Podcast 112: We Have an NFT, Racing a Möbius Strip, and Syncing Video with OpenCV and Blender

Hackaday editors Elliot Williams and Mike Szczys celebrate the cleverest projects from the week that was. We tried to catch a few fools on Thursday with our Lightmode™ and NFT …read more Continue reading Hackaday Podcast 112: We Have an NFT, Racing a Möbius Strip, and Syncing Video with OpenCV and Blender

Hackaday Podcast 111: 3D Graphics are Ultrasonic, Lobotomizing Alexa, 3D-Printing Leaky Rockets, and Gaming the Font System

Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams curate a week of great hacks. Physical displays created in 3D space are a holy grail, and you can make one with 200 …read more Continue reading Hackaday Podcast 111: 3D Graphics are Ultrasonic, Lobotomizing Alexa, 3D-Printing Leaky Rockets, and Gaming the Font System

Hackaday Podcast 110: One Unicode to Rule Them, Hacking Focus Stacking, Virtual Typing, and Zombie Weather Channel

Hackaday editors Elliot Williams and Mike Szczys cover a great week of hardware hacking. We saw a fault-injection attack that used an electric flyswatter and hand-wound coil to twiddle bits …read more Continue reading Hackaday Podcast 110: One Unicode to Rule Them, Hacking Focus Stacking, Virtual Typing, and Zombie Weather Channel

Hackaday Podcast 109: Cars that Suck, a Synth Packed with 555s, X-ray Letter Reading, and Pecking at a PS/2 Keyboard

Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams riff on the week’s most interesting hacks. It’s hard to imagine a more perfect piece of art than an original Pong circuit board …read more Continue reading Hackaday Podcast 109: Cars that Suck, a Synth Packed with 555s, X-ray Letter Reading, and Pecking at a PS/2 Keyboard

Decoding the PS/2 Keyboard Protocol Using Good Old Fashioned Hardware

1987 was a glorious year.  It brought us the PS/2 keyboard standard that’s still present on many a motherboard back panel to this day. (It also marked the North America/Europe release of The Legend of Zelda but that’s another article.) …read more

Continue reading Decoding the PS/2 Keyboard Protocol Using Good Old Fashioned Hardware