Hey, you know what’s happening right now? We’re wrapping up the third round of The Hackaday Prize. This challenge, Wheels, Wings, and Walkers, is dedicated to things that move. If it’s a robot, it qualifies, if it’s a plane, it qualifies, if it passes butter, it qualifies. There’s only a short time for you to get your entry in. Do it now. Superliminal advertising.
Speaking of the Hackaday Prize, this project would be a front-runner if only [Peter] would enter it in the competition. It’s one thing to have a cult; I have a cult and a petition to ‘stop’ me.
We were completely unaware of this project, but a few weeks ago, a cubesat was launched from Baikonur. This cubesat contains a gigantic mylar reflector, and once it’s deployed it will be the second brightest object in the night sky after the moon. I don’t know why we haven’t seen this in the press, but if you have any pictures of sightings, drop those in the comments.
In a mere two years, we’ll be looking at the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing. The mission control center at Johnson Space Center — where these landings were commanded and controlled — is still around, and it’s not in the best shape. There’s a Kickstarter to restore the Apollo Mission Control Center to its former glory. For the consoles, this means restoring them to Apollo 15 operational configuration.
We’ve seen 3D printed remote control airplanes, and at this point, there’s nothing really exceptional about printing a wing. This user on imgur is going a different direction with 3D printed fiberglass molds. Basically, it’s a fuselage for a Mustang that is printed, glued together, with the inside sanded and coated in wax. Two layers (3 oz and 6 oz) fiberglass is laid down with West Systems epoxy. After a few days, the mold is cracked open and a fuselage appears. This looks great, and further refinements of the process can include vapor smoothing of the inside of the mold, a few tabs to make sure the mold halves don’t break when the part is released, and larger parts in general.
The Darknet’s Casefile will take you to the limit of your existing knowledge. Join them, to go on a quest to improve your technical abilities.
This week is Def Con. That means two things. First, we’re on a hardware hunt. If you’ve been dedicating the last few months to #badgelife or other artisanal electronics, we want to hear about it. Second, [Joe Kim] made a graphic of the Tindie dog wearing a Hackaday hoodie and it’s adorable. There are a limited number of stickers of our hacker dog.
Gigabyte launched a single board computer with an Intel Apollo Lake CPU, discrete memory and storage, and a mini PCIe slot. Of course, this is being incorrectly marketed as a ‘Raspberry Pi competitor’, but whatever.
Oh look they made a movie about Brian, boy must he feel so “special”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRx2da1L0Ls
Interesting fact: Geoge Harrison funded my conception, just because he wanted to see it.
You are an accident that happened on the set of a porn movie funded by a rich hippy?
Most of us are.
> There are a limited number of stickers of our hacker dog.
How do we get one? Only at DEFCON?
They’ll be around at various places. This is the cutest Hackaday/Tindie/Whatever sticker yet.
Keepin my eyes open for that cubesat.
I’m wondering if I want to try using their tracking app. My knowledge of russian is limited to their alphabet, so it’s seems like a hassle…
http://www.n2yo.com/?s=42830
Seems it won’t be visible at all from the southern hemisphere.
Tried to see it when it was around here, but couldn’t see anything.
Try waiting for a pass that puts it in the eastern sky not long after sunset. It will be up there for about a month.
I wouldn’t touch that app. Looking for my old alternatives for tracking satellites to see if any have this one.
The restoration project looks awesome-good find Benchoff.
He probably found it here: http://hackaday.com/submit-a-tip/
I do agree that it looks awesome
The site about the RPi is assuming people are only using the RPi as a home media PC.
It has to have a lot of GPIO and be no more that 8mm larger than the RPi from the edges.
It is a PC that’ll be a bar till or another similar glorified calculator in the near future. It is an E-POS machine.
E-POS == Electronic Point Of Sale (Or Electronic Piece Of Sh** as they normally are)
Oh and:
The white socket above the mPCI-e+sim area is not GPIO, it is an LVDS connector to connect laptop style displays to the iGPU in the SoC “processor”
The four white sockets to the left are likely full 12v RS232,sometimes powered with one of the following 5V, 12v, 24V at >1A i.e. chip&pin.
Dual Ethernet for Print-server and VPN configurations (Printer in kitchen and in server room for order filling and income checkup accounting)
So on and so forth……………………………..
therefore E-POS computer, nothing more.
‘not a hack’ cannot be applied to benchoff. brilliant.
Not A Hack
Doesn’t “hack” mean something else in reference to a writer?
No STE\AM in this post. Thank goodness ;-)
Gigabyte’s new single-board computer, the Gigabyte GA-SBCAP3350, is being described as a Raspberry Pi competitor?
GA-SBCAP3350–
Built-in Intel® Celeron™ N3350 (up to 2.4 GHz) dual-core processor
GIGABYTE Ultra Durable™ Technology with 2x Copper PCB Design
Single channel DDR3L SO-DIMM slot support
2 x RS232/422/485, 2 x RS232, Digital I/O 8-in/8-out
Mini-PCIe Slot for Half-Length WIFI Card Support
Mini-PCIe Dual Purpose Slot for mSATA SSD Support
LVDS Header mux with eDP signal for System Integrated Flat Panel Display Support
Amplified Speaker Header Able to Drive Up to 2W System Integrated Speaker
All Solid Capacitors with Humidity Protection New Glass Fabric PCB design
Dual GbE LAN with high ESD Protection support WOL and PXE
SBC 146x102mm Form Factor with Wide Range 9~36V DC-In Power Design
By whom? The Raspberry Pi Foundation?
(Perhaps the MicroBit is a worthy competitor…)