Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams look through the most interesting hacks of the week. We spent ample time in adulation of the automatons built by François Junod; wizard-level watchmaking wrapped in endless levels of artistic detail. A couple projects stuffed into old cellphones turned Elliot’s head. We got to see what happens if you spin a gear’s teeth on two axes to make a universal spherical gear. And we conclude the episode with a look at how Windows 11 may send a lot of good hardware to recycle center, and at how toothpaste tubes sometimes miss the recycling center completely.
Take a look at the links below if you want to follow along, and as always, tell us what you think about this episode in the comments!
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Episode 125 Show Notes:
What’s that Sound?
Tell us your answer for this week’s “What’s that sound?”. Next week on the show we’ll randomly draw one name from the correct answers to win a limited-edition Hackaday Podcast T-shirt. (How limited? This will be the 5th ever.)
New This Week:
Interesting Hacks of the Week:
- Listen To The RF Around You
- Old Phones with New OSes
- The Incredible Mechanical Artistry Of François Junod
- Tiny Operating System For Tiny Computer
- Video De-shaker Software Measures Linear Rail Quality
- Active Ball Joint Uses Spherical Gear
Quick Hacks:
- Mike’s Picks
- Elliot’s Picks:
also the censoring this week was the “6 million dollar man” jumping or doing something superhuman.
Yeah! I thought that one would be recognizable enough. Unfortunately, I have no idea what he’s doing there — I just downloaded some sounds off the web.
thanks for mention – I needed it
https://floatingintheclouds.com/hackaday-podcast-shout-out/
I think it was more than just a mention, we both loved the active ball mechanism and all the detail you shared about the project!