Illustrated Kristina with an IBM Model M keyboard floating between her hands.

Keebin’ With Kristina: The One With The Beginner’s Guide To Split Keyboards

Curious about split keyboards, but overwhelmed by the myriad options for every little thing? You should start with [thehaikuza]’s excellent Beginner’s Guide to Split Keyboards.

Three different split keyboards.
Image by [thehaikuza] via reddit
Your education begins with the why, so you can skip that if you must, but the visuals are a nice refresher on that front.

He then gets into the types of keyboards — you got your standard row-staggered rectangles that we all grew up on, column-staggered, and straight-up ortholinear, which no longer enjoy the popularity they once did.

At this point, the guide becomes a bit of a Choose Your Own Adventure story. If you want a split but don’t want to learn to change much if at all about your typing style, keep reading, because there are definitely options.

But if you’re ready to commit to typing correctly for the sake of ergonomics, you can skip the Alice and other baby ergo choices and get your membership to the light side. First are features — you must decide what you need to get various jobs done. Then you learn a bit about key map customization, including using a non-QWERTY layout. Finally, there’s the question of buying versus DIYing. All the choices are yours, so go for it!

Via reddit

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SpyTech: The Underwater Wire Tap

In the 1970s, the USSR had an undersea cable connecting a major naval base at Petropavlovsk to the Pacific Fleet headquarters at Vladivostok. The cable traversed the Sea of Okhotsk, which, at the time, the USSR claimed. It was off limits to foreign vessels, heavily patrolled, and laced with detection devices. How much more secure could it be? Against the US Navy, apparently not very secure at all. For about a decade starting in 1972, the Navy delivered tapes of all the traffic on the cable to the NSA.

Top Secret

You need a few things to make this a success. First, you need a stealthy submarine. The Navy had the USS Halibut, which has a strange history. You also need some sort of undetectable listening device that can operate on the ocean floor. You also need a crew that is sworn to secrecy.

That last part was hard to manage. It takes a lot of people to mount a secret operation to the other side of the globe, so they came up with a cover story: officially, the Halibut was in Okhotsk to recover parts of a Soviet weapon for analysis. Only a few people knew the real mission. The whole operation was known as Operation Ivy Bells.

The Halibut

The Halibut is possibly the strangest submarine ever. It started life destined to be a diesel sub. However, before it launched in 1959, it had been converted to nuclear power. In fact, the sub was the first designed to launch guided missiles and was the first sub to successfully launch a guided missile, although it had to surface to launch.

Oddly enough, the sub carried nuclear cruise missiles and its specific target, should the world go to a nuclear war, was the Soviet naval base at Petropavolvsk.

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FLOSS Weekly Episode 865: Multiplayer Firewall

This week Jonathan chats with Philippe Humeau about Crowdsec! That company created a Web Application Firewall as on Open Source project, and now runs it as a Multiplayer Firewall. What does that mean, and how has it worked out as a business concept? Watch to find out!

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Linux Fu: The USB WiFi Dongle Exercise

The TX50U isn’t very Linux-friendly

If you’ve used Linux for a long time, you know that we are spoiled these days. Getting a new piece of hardware back in the day was often a horrible affair, requiring custom kernels and lots of work. Today, it should be easier. The default drivers on most distros cover a lot of ground, kernel modules make adding drivers easier, and dkms can automate the building of modules for specific kernels, even if it isn’t perfect.

So ordering a cheap WiFi dongle to improve your old laptop’s network connection should be easy, right? Obviously, the answer is no or this would be a very short post.

Plug and Pray

The USB dongle in question is a newish TP-Link Archer TX50U. It is probably perfectly serviceable for a Windows computer, and I got a “deal” on it. Plugging it in caused it to show up in the list of USB devices, but no driver attached to it, nor were any lights on the device blinking. Bad sign. Pro tip: lsusb -t will show you what drivers are attached to which devices. If you see a device with no driver, you know you have a problem. Use -tv if you want a little more detail.

The lsusb output shows the devices as a Realtek, so that tells you a little about the chipset inside. Unfortunately, it doesn’t tell you exactly which chip is in use.

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Get Your Green Power On!

Nobody likes power cords, and batteries always need recharging or replacing. What if your device could run on only the power it could gather together by itself from the world around it? It would be almost like free energy, although without breaking the laws of physics.

Hackaday’s 2026 Green-Powered Challenge asks you to show us your devices, contraptions, and hacks that can run on the power they can harvest. Whether it’s heat, light, vibration, or any other source of energy that your device gathers to keep running, we’d like to see it.

The top three entries will receive $150 shopping sprees courtesy of the contest’s sponsor, DigiKey, so get your entry in before April 24, 2026, to be eligible to win.

Honorable Mentions

As always, we have several honorable mention categories to get your creative juices flowing:

  • Solar: In terms of self-powered anything, photovoltaic cells are probably the easiest way to go, but yet good light-harvesting designs aren’t exactly trivial either. Let’s see what you can run on just the sun. (Or even room lighting?)
  • Anything But PV: Harnessing the light is too easy for you, then? How about piezo-electric power or a heat generator? Show us your best self-powering projects that work even when it’s dark out.
  • Least Power: Maybe the smartest way to make your project run forever is to just cut down on the juice. If your project can run on its own primarily because of clever energy savings, it’s eligible for this mention.
  • Most Power: How much of a challenge is building a solar-powered desk calculator in 2026? How about pushing it to the other extreme? Let’s see how much power you can consume while still running without batteries or cords. Does your off-grid shack count here? Let’s see it!

Prior Art

We’ve seen a lot of green-powered projects on Hackaday over the years, ranging from a solar-powered web server to a microcontroller powered by a BPW34 photodiode. Will your entry run off the juice harvested by an LED? It’s not inconceivable!

Solar cells only work when the sun shines, though. As long as your body is putting out heat, this Seebeck-effect ring will keep on running. (Matrix vibes notwithstanding!) Or maybe you want to go straight from heat to motion with a Stirling engine. And our favorite environmental-energy-harvester of all has to be the Beverly Clock and its relatives, running on the daily heat cycles and atmospheric pressure changes.

Your Turn

So what’s your energy-harvesting project? Batteries are too easy. Take it to the next level! All you have to do to enter is put your project up on Hackaday.io, pull down the “Submit Project to…” widget on the right, and you’re in. It’s that easy, and we can’t wait to see what you are all up to.

And of course, stay tuned to Hackaday, as we pick from our favorites along the way.

LED Printers: The Quiet Achievers You May Not Have Heard Of

Many different types of printers have entered the market over the years. Most of us are intimately familiar with the common inkjet and laser, both of which can be found in homes and offices all over the world. Then there are those old dot matrix printers that were so noisy in use, thermal printers, and even solid ink printers that occupied a weird niche for a time.

However, very little attention is ever paid to the LED printer. They’re not actually that uncommon, and they work in a very familiar way. It’s just that because these printers are so similar to an existing technology, they largely escaped any real notability in the marketplace. Let’s explore the inner workings of the printer tech that the world forgot.

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Hackaday Links: March 1, 2026

We’ll start this week off with a bit of controversy from Linux Land. Anyone who’s ever used the sudo command knows that you don’t see any kind of visual feedback while entering your password. This was intended as a security feature, as it was believed that an on-screen indicator of how many characters had been entered would allow somebody snooping over your shoulder to figure out the length of your password. But in Ubuntu 26.04, that’s no longer the case. The traditional sudo binary has been replaced with a one written in Rust, which Canonical has recently patched to follow the modern convention of showing asterisks on the password prompt.

As you might expect, this prompted an immediate reaction from Linux greybeards. A bug report was filed just a few days ago demanding that the change be reverted, arguing that breaking a decades-old expectation with no warning could be confusing for users. The official response from a Canonical dev was that they see it the other way around, and that the change was made to improve the user experience. It was also pointed out that those who want to revert to the old style of prompt can do so with a config change. The issue was immediately marked as “Won’t Fix”, but the discussion is ongoing.

Speaking of unexpected changes, multiple reports are coming in that the February security update for Samsung Galaxy devices, which is currently rolling out, removes several functions from the Android recovery menu. After the update is applied to phones such as the S25 and Fold 7, long-standing features, such as the ability to wipe the device’s cache partition or install updates via Android Debug Bridge (ADB), disappear.

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