Skip to content
Logo

Hackaday

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Hackaday.io
  • Store
  • Hackaday Prize
  • Submit
  • About

GPL Violations Cost Creality a US Distributor

One of the core tenets of free and open source software licenses is that you’re being provided source code for a project with the hope that you’ll “pay it forward” if and when you utilize that code. In fact some licenses, such as the GNU Public License (GPL), require that you keep the source code for subsequent spin-offs or forks open. These are known as viral licenses, and the hope is that they will help spread the use of open source as derivative works can’t turn around and refuse to release their source code.

Unfortunately, not everyone plays by the …read more

FOSSCON 2018: Hacking the Indego Bike Sharing API

It’s often said that necessity of the mother of invention, but as a large portion of the projects we cover here at Hackaday can attest, curiosity has to at least be its step-mother. Not every project starts with a need, sometimes it’s just about understanding how something works. That desire we’ve all felt from time to time, when we’ve looked at some obscure piece of hardware or technology and decided that the world would be a slightly better place if we cracked it open and looked at what spilled out.

That’s precisely the feeling Eric O’Callaghan had when he …read more

Selling Everything, Moving to Asia, and Setting Up a Company

Today I don’t have a hack for you. I have a story, one that I hope will prove useful to a few of you who are considering a move to Asia to chase opportunities here.

Seven years ago, I was a pretty stereotypical starving hacker. I had five jobs: A full-time dead-end job in biotech, and four part-time or contract gigs that were either electronic hardware design or programming. I worked perhaps 50 hours a week, and was barely past the poverty line – I was starting to wonder why I spent so much time in school. I saw the …read more

2018 Electromagnetic Field Badge: It’s an Entire Phone!

As is always the case with a significant hacker camp, we’ve been awaiting the official badge announcement for the upcoming Electromagnetic Field 2018 hacker camp with huge interest. These badges, for readers who may have been on Mars for the past few years, are part of a lively scene of wearable electronics at hacker conferences and camps, and can usually be expected to sport a fully-fledged computer in their own right along with other special functionality.

The announcement of the 2018 badge, dubbed the TiLDA Mk4, does not disappoint. We’d been told that there would be an on-site GSM network …read more

Arduino Gets Command Line Interface Tools That Let You Skip the IDE

Arduino now has an officially supported command-line interface. The project, called arduino-cli, is the first time that the official toolchain has departed from the Java-based editor known as the Arduino IDE. You can see the official announcement video below.

Obviously this isn’t a new idea. Platform IO and other command-line driven tools exist. But official support means even if you don’t want to use the command line yourself, this should open up a path to integrate the Arduino build process to other IDEs more easily.

The code is open source, but they do mention in their official announcement that you …read more

From The Blog

See all blog entries
  • This Is The Raspberry Pi Robot To Beat All Others

    No comments

    By Brian Benchoff | August 29, 2018

    Before the introduction of the Raspberry Pi, building robots was hard. The best solution to turning motors on a chassis was repurposing an old roomba. For the brain, maybe you could throw Linux on a router and move your rover around with an old Linksys. Before that, you could buy a crappy robotics kit, thrown together in a box and sold as an ‘educational kit’. I’m sure there are a few readers out there that built robots by wire-wrapping HC11s.

    Now we have 3D printers and Raspberry Pis, and with that comes a golden age of robotics. One of …read more

  • All the Badges of DEF CON 26 (vol 3)

    4 Comments

    By Mike Szczys | August 29, 2018

    I tried my best to see every badge and speak with every badge maker at DEF CON 26. One thing’s for sure, seeing them all was absolutely impossible this year, but I came close. Check out the great badges shown off in volume 1 and in volume 2 of this series. The game is afoot, and if you are headed to a hacker conference there’s never been a better time to build your own hardware badge — whether you build 5 or 500!

    All right, let’s look at the badges! …read more

  • Friday Hack Chat: GNU Radio

    3 Comments

    By Brian Benchoff | August 29, 2018

    Software defined radio picked up a lot of popularity when it was discovered that cheap USB TV tuners were functional bits of hardware that could become SDRs. It’s the software that makes this possible, and when it comes to SDR software, there’s no better tool than GNU Radio. For this week’s Hack Chat we’re going to sit down with some of the people behind this awesome software tool and pick their brains.

    Our guests for this week’s Hack Chat will be Derek Kozel and Nate Temple, officers of the GNU Radio project. They’re also organizers of this year’s GNU Radio …read more

  • A Scratch-Built Drill Press Vise from Scrap

    5 Comments

    By Dan Maloney | August 29, 2018

    Never underestimate the importance of fixturing when you’re machining parts. No matter what the material, firmly locking it down is the key to good results, and may be the difference between a pleasant afternoon in the shop and a day in the Emergency Room. Flying parts and shattered tooling are no joke, but a lot of times quality commercial solutions are expensive and, well, commercial.  So this scratch-built drill press vise is something the thrifty metalworker may want to consider.

    To be sure, [Ollari’s] vise, made as it is almost completely from scrap angle iron, is no substitute for a …read more

  • The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space

    22 Comments

    By Brian Benchoff | August 29, 2018

    Deep in the mojave, the largest aircraft ever made will soon be making test flights. This is the Stratolaunch, and it’s measured the largest to ever fly based on wingspan. The Stratolaunch was constructed out of two 747s, and is designed for a single purpose: as a mobile launch platform for orbital rockets.

    There are a couple of ways to measure the size of an aircraft. The AN-225 Mriya has the highest payload capacity, but only one of those was ever built (though that might change soon). The Spruce Goose was formerly the largest aircraft by wingspan, but it only …read more

  • Power Steering Pump Repurposed for Great Speed

    22 Comments

    By Bryan Cockfield | August 29, 2018

    Electric bikes are getting a lot of attention lately. Pretty much anyone can buy a kit online and get a perfectly street legal ride with plenty of range. But if you don’t want to take the kit route, and you’d rather take a tack that will get you noticed more around these parts, take some notes from [Jule553648]’s recent build that definitely isn’t using any parts from a kit.

    The motor from the build is an electric power steering pump from a junkyard car. This gets mounted on a one-off rear bike rack and drives the rear tire with help …read more

  • Raspberry Pi as 433 MHz to MQTT Gateway

    13 Comments

    By Tom Nardi | August 29, 2018

    Many low-cost wireless temperature and humidity sensors use a 433 MHz transmitter to send data back to their base stations. This is a great choice for the manufacturer of said devices because it’s simple and the radios are cheap, but it does limit what we as the consumer can do with it a bit. Generally speaking, you won’t be reading data from these sensors on your computer unless you’ve got an SDR device and some experience with GNU Radio and reading the Nexus protocol.

    But [Aquaticus] has developed a very comprehensive piece of software that should make integrating these type …read more

← Older posts

Featured Projects

See all projects
DIY PORTABLE SOLDERING IRON STATION

DIY PORTABLE SOLDERING IRON STATION

by youkito1991
AtarPi

AtarPi

by Blue Okiris

From the Store

See all products
USB Tester 2.0 Bundle

USB Tester 2.0 Bundle

From $61.00
0
GoodFET42

GoodFET42

$49.97
0
USB microISP

USB microISP

$19.97
0
Hackaday.io Women's T-shirt

Hackaday.io Women's T-shirt

$20.00
5
VA Tester Kit

VA Tester Kit

$9.97
0
SparkFun Digital Sandbox

SparkFun Digital Sandbox

From $74.97
0

Trending Projects

See all projects
PCB Motor

PCB Motor

by Carl Bugeja
FieldKit

FieldKit

by Shah Selbe
Hackaday.io Project

Hackaday.io Project

by Lutetium
Arduino+Virtual reality+Wii

Arduino+Virtual reality+Wii

by DiegoBallesteros
Three Phase Smart Electricity Meter

Three Phase Smart Electricity Meter

by martin2250
Musical Prosthetics

Musical Prosthetics

by Kate Reed

Search

Never miss a hack

Follow on facebook Follow on google+ Follow on twitter Follow on youtube Follow on rss Contact us

Subscribe

If you missed it

  • The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space

    22 Comments
  • Selling Everything, Moving to Asia, and Setting Up a Company

    44 Comments
  • Two Bit Circus Took The Tech We Love And Built An Amusement Park

    4 Comments
  • The First Vending Machine Hacked Liquor Laws: The Puss and Mew

    36 Comments
  • Kathleen Booth: Assembling Early Computers While Inventing Assembly

    7 Comments
More from this category

Categories

Our Columns

  • All the Badges of DEF CON 26 (vol 3)

    4 Comments
  • Martian Dust Storm May Spell Doom for Rover

    60 Comments
  • Let the Musical Instrument Challenge Begin!

    22 Comments
  • FOSSCON 2018: Hacking the Indego Bike Sharing API

    5 Comments
  • How to Mash Up BLE, NodeJS, and MQTT to Get Internet of Things

    10 Comments
More from this category

Recent comments

  • Positivew on Recreating The Amiga 1200 PCB from Pictures
  • Pat on Martian Dust Storm May Spell Doom for Rover
  • Murray on A Scratch-Built Drill Press Vise from Scrap
  • dcfusor2015 on The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space
  • Perry on The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space
  • Pat on Martian Dust Storm May Spell Doom for Rover
  • Miroslav on The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space
  • rubypanther on Arduino Gets Command Line Interface Tools That Let You Skip the IDE
  • dcfusor2015 on The Largest Aircraft Ever Built Will Soon Launch Rockets To Space
  • Kevin Harrelson on Recreating The Amiga 1200 PCB from Pictures

Now on Hackaday.io

  • Carl liked PCB Motor.
  • Punit wrote a comment on Adafruit Feather BT Holo-HUD (aka Scroogle Glass).
  • Carl Bugeja has added a new log for PCB Motor.
  • Punit liked Adafruit Feather BT Holo-HUD (aka Scroogle Glass).
  • Vinay started following PotentialLabs.
  • Chris Handwerker wrote a reply on GNU Radio Hack Chat.
  • Carl Bugeja has updated the log for Flexible PCB Actuator.
  • openworldittechy liked Arduino+Virtual reality+Wii.
  • Shah Selbe liked Smaller Simone Giertz's Good Habit Tracker.
  • Bruno Laurencich has updated the log for Motion Capture system that you can build yourself.
Logo
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Hackaday.io
  • Store
  • Hackaday Prize
  • Video
  • Submit a tip
  • About
  • Contact us

Never miss a hack

Follow on facebook Follow on google+ Follow on twitter Follow on youtube Follow on rss Contact us

Subscribe to Newsletter

Copyright © 2018 | Hackaday, Hack A Day, and the Skull and Wrenches Logo are Trademarks of Hackaday.com | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
Powered by WordPress.com VIP

By using our website and services, you expressly agree to the placement of our performance, functionality and advertising cookies. Learn more

Cancel