Diskette Game Floppy Flopper Is Certainly No Flop

There’s a tactile joy to the humble 3.5″ floppy that no USB stick will ever match. It’s not just the way they thunk into place in a well-made drive, the eject button, too, is a tactile experience not to be missed. If you were a child in disk-drive days, you may have popped a disk in-and-out repeatedly just for the fun of it — and if you weren’t a child, and did it anyway, we’re not going to judge. [igor] has come up with a physical game called “Floppy Flopper” that provides an excuse to do just that en masse, and it looks like lots of fun.

It consists of nine working floppy drives in a 3×3 grid, all mounted on a hefty welded-steel frame. Each drive has an RGB LED above it. The name of the game is to swap floppies as quickly as possible so that the color of the floppy in the drive matches the color flashing above it. Each successful insertion is worth thirteen points, tracked on a lovely matrix display. Each round is faster than the last, until you miss the window or mix up colors in haste. That might make more sense if you watch the demo video below.

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Pong Gets The Boot

You might be surprised to find out that [Akshat Joshi’s] Pong game that fits in a 512-byte boot sector isn’t the first of its kind. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t an accomplishment to shoehorn useful code in that little bitty space.

As you might expect, a game like this uses assembly language. It also can’t use any libraries or operating system functions because there aren’t any at that particular time of the computer startup sequence. Once you remember that the bootloader has to end with two magic bytes (0x55 0xAA), you know you have to get it all done in 510 bytes or less.

This version of Pong uses 80×25 text mode and writes straight into video memory. You can find the code in a single file on GitHub. In the old days, getting something like this working was painful because you had little choice but reboot your computer to test it and hope it went well. Now you can run it in a virtual machine like QEMU and even use that to debug problems in ways that would have made a developer from the 1990s offer up their life savings.

We’ve seen this before, but we still appreciate the challenge. We wonder if you could write Pong in BootBasic?

Amiga? Arduino? AMeagerBall Gets The Uno Bouncing

When the iconic “Boing Ball” first debuted 40 years ago, it was a wonder to behold. There was nothing like it in the home compuing world upto that time, and it showed that Commodore’s new “Amiga” was a powerhouse sure to last the test of time. Forty years later, the Amiga as we knew it then might not be with us anymore, but [Mark Wilson] is recreating its iconic demo on a microcontroller– but not just any microcontroller. “AMeagerBall” is an Arduino Uno exclusive, and it even tells the time.

Like the original “Boing Ball”, the demo is running at 320×240, though on a touch LCD shield instead of a CRT. Unlike some microcontrollers, the Uno doesn’t have the horsepower to just brute-force emulate a 1980s home computer, so [Mark] has had to recreate the boing ball from scratch. He’s not doing it with any graphics libraries, either. On the Uno that would be too slow, so [Mark] is driving the LCD directly to its appropriate registers, to stay close enough to the metal to make it work. That means if you’re going to try the code on his GitHub repository, you’ll need to be sure to use matching hardware or be prepared to port it.

One of the things about Amiga’s demo that was so impressive is that it hardly made use of the CPU, allowing the Workbench to be pulled up while the ball bounced. That’s not the case here, as the UNO doesn’t have any extra graphics chips. Still, [Mark] was able to squeeze enough horsepower out of everyone’s favourite ATmega to present us with an Amiga-styled clock– either analog, digital, or in the workbench title bar in that iconic blue-and-white. To keep the clock accurate, he’s squeezed an RTC module in, too. Lovely! The different clocks can be accessed via the touchscreen.

Oh, did we forget to mention that the touchscreen is implemented? This certainly stretches the hardware far enough to be considered a demo. If just a bouncing ball doesn’t work the UNO hard enough for you, try booting Linux.

This isn’t the first bouncing ball demo we’ve seen on a microcontroller:  here are four of them bouncing in an ATtiny85.

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Browser Fingerprinting And Why VPNs Won’t Make You Anonymous

Amidst the glossy marketing for VPN services, it can be tempting to believe that the moment you flick on the VPN connection you can browse the internet with full privacy. Unfortunately this is quite far from the truth, as interacting with internet services like websites leaves a significant fingerprint. In a study by [RTINGS.com] this  browser fingerprinting was investigated in detail, showing just how easy it is to uniquely identify a visitor across the 83 laptops used in the study.

As summarized in the related video (also embedded below), the start of the study involved the Am I Unique? website which provides you with an overview of your browser fingerprint. With over 4.5 million fingerprints in their database as of writing, even using Edge on Windows 10 marks you as unique, which is telling.

In the study multiple VPN services were used, each of which resulted in exactly the same fingerprint hash. This is based on properties retrieved from the browser, via JavaScript and other capabilities exposed by the browser, including WebGL and HTML5 Canvas.

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Possibly-Smallest ESP32 Board Uses Smallest-Footprint Parts

Whenever there’s a superlative involved, you know that degree of optimization has to leave something else on the table. In the case of [PegorK]’s f32, the smallest ESP32 dev board we’ve seen, the cost of miniaturization is GPIO.

There’s only one GPIO pin broken out, and it’s pre-wired to an LED. That’s the bad news, and depending on what you want an ESP32 for, it might not phase you at all. What is impressive here, if not the number of I/O pins, is the size of the board: at 9.85 mm x 8.45 mm barely overhangs the USB-C socket that takes up one side of the board.

Pegor provides this helpful image in the readme so you know what you’re getting into with the 01005 resistors.

In order to get the ESP32-C3FH4 onto such a tiny board, all of the other support hardware had to be the smallest possible sizes– including resistors in 01005. If you don’t speak SMD, one could read that number code as “oh god too small” — at 0.4 mm x 0.2 mm it’s as minuscule as you’ll find– and [Pegor] hand soldered them.

OK, he did use a hot plate for the final step, but he did tin the pads manually with a soldering iron, which is still impressive. Most of us probably would have taken PCBWay up on their offer of assembly services, but not [Pegor]. Apparently part of the reason for this project was that he was looking for an excuse to use the really small footprint components.

Aside from leaving out GPIO and needing too-small SMD components, [Pegor] admits that pesky little details like antenna matching circuits and decoupling capacitors had to get cut to make the tiny footprint, so this board might be more of a stunt than anything practical. So what can you do with the smallest ESP32 board? Well, [Pegor] put up a basic web interface up to get you started blinking the built-in LED; after that, it’s up to you. Perhaps you might fancy a teeny-tiny minecraft server? If you can stand to increase the volume a little bit, we’ve seen how to hack a C3 for much better wifi performance.

Thanks to [Pegor] for the tip, and remember– submit your projects, big or small, we read ’em all!

Build A Stranger Things Wall You Can Freak Out At In Your Own Home

When Stranger Things premiered in 2016, it was a cultural force. Foreign DJs gushed over the lush 80s soundtrack, fashionistas loved the clothing, and the world became obsessed with the idea of using Christmas lights to communicate across material planes. [kyjohnso] has recreated that experience with the technology of today.

If you haven’t watched the show — Joyce Byers is trying to communicate with her son Will, who just so happens to be stuck in another plane of existence called the Upside Down. She screams questions at her living room wall, upon which hangs a series of Christmas lights, marked with the letters A to Z. Will is able to communicate back by causing the lights to flash, one letter at a time.

This build works a little differently. You basically type a message into a terminal on a Raspberry Pi, and it gets sent to a large language model—namely, the Claude API. The response from Claude (or Will Byers, if you’re imagining) is then flashed out on a WS2812B set of LED Christmas lights on the wall. [kyjohnso] added dramatic pauses whenever there’s a space in the output, somewhat replicating the dramatic elements of the show itself. Files are on GitHub for the spooky and curious.

It’s a neat build that would be a hit at any Halloween party. We can’t imagine how much more immersive it would be if paired with a speech-to-text engine so you could actually scream at the thing like a distraught Midwestern parent who has just lost her youngest child. It’s all about committing to the bit; if you build such a thing, don’t hesitate to notify the tipsline!

FLOSS Weekly Episode 855: Get In The Minecart, Loser!

This week Jonathan chats with Kevin, Colin, and Curtis about Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead! It’s a rogue-like post-apocalyptic survival game that you can play in the terminal, over SSH if you really want to! Part of the story is a Kickstarter that resulted in a graphics tile-set. And then there’s the mods!

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