Linux Fu: Audio Network Pipes
Life was simpler when everything your computer did was text-based. It is easy enough to shove data into one end of a pipe and take it out of the other. …read more Continue reading Linux Fu: Audio Network Pipes
Collaborate Disseminate
Life was simpler when everything your computer did was text-based. It is easy enough to shove data into one end of a pipe and take it out of the other. …read more Continue reading Linux Fu: Audio Network Pipes
[Folaefolc] was craving a new keyboard build a few weeks ago and got inspired by the humble 3.5″ floppy disk. So much so that he decided to make a split …read more Continue reading Keebin’ with Kristina: the One with the TRON Keyboard
We received belated word this week of the passage of Ward Christensen, who died unexpectedly back in October at the age of 78. If the name doesn’t ring a bell, …read more Continue reading Hackaday Links: November 24, 2024
The open-source hardware business landscape is no doubt a tough one, but is it actually tougher than for closed-source hardware? That question has been on our minds since the announcement …read more Continue reading Open Source, Forced Innovation, and Making Good Products
Ever get home, tired after work, sit down on a couch, and spend an hour or two sitting down without even managing to change into your home clothes? It’s a …read more Continue reading Hack On Self: The Un-Crash Alarm
The world of security research is no stranger to the phenomenon of not-a-vulnerability. That’s where a security researcher finds something interesting, reports it to the project, and it turns out …read more Continue reading This Week in Security: Footguns, Bing Worms, and Gogs
Your project needs a cable, and since USB-C cables are omnipresent now, it’s only natural to want to reuse them for your evil schemes. Ever seen USB 3.0 cables used …read more Continue reading USB-C For Hackers: Reusing Cables
This week, Jonathan Bennett, Randal Schwartz, and Aaron Newcomb chat about Linux, the challenges with using system modules like the Raspberry Pi, challenges with funding development, and more! Did you …read more Continue reading FLOSS Weekly Episode 810: Pi4J – Stable and Boring on the Raspberry Pi
Last week I completed the SAO flower badge redrawing task, making a complete KiCad project. Most of the SAO petals are already released as KiCad projects, except for the Petal …read more Continue reading Supercon 2024 SAO Petal KiCad Redrawing Project
This week, Jonathan Bennett and David Ruggles chat with Frank Delporte about Pi4J, the friendly Java libraries for the Raspberry Pi, that expose GPIO, SPI, I2C and other IO interfaces. …read more Continue reading FLOSS Weekly Episode 809: Pi4J – Stable and Boring on the Raspberry Pi