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Over time, web browsers have accumulated a ton of features beyond what anyone from the 90s might have imagined, from an ...
A couple of decades ago now, several things happened which gave life to our world and made it what it has become.
In this episode of the Hackaday Podcast, editors Elliot Williams and Tom Nardi start out with a warning about potentially ...
You may have noticed the Anime Catgirls when trying to get to the Linux Kernel’s mailing list, or one of any number of other ...
D printing has transformed how hobbyists fabricate things, but what additional doors would open if we could go even smaller?
In a recent video our hacker [Electronic Wizard] introduces the 74HC595 shift register and explains how to use it to drive ...
If you are casually listening to the radio, you probably tune into a local station and with modern receivers and FM ...
Now that Commodore has arisen from the depths of obscurity like Cthulhu awoken from R’lyeh, the question on every shoggoth’s ...
Posts on Hackaday sometimes trend a little bit retro, but rarely do we cover hacks that reach back into the Bronze Age. Still ...
Famously, Nikola Tesla won the War of the Currents in the early days of electrification because his AC system could use transformers to minimize losses for long distance circuits. That was well ...
Let’s say you want to build a Nixie clock. You could go out and find some tubes, source a good power supply design, start whipping up a PCB, and working on a custom enclosure. Or, you could s… ...
Of course, there’s nothing unusual about using 7-segment displays, especially in a clock. However, [Edison Science Corner] didn’t buy displays. Instead, he fabricated them from a PCB us… ...
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