Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams help you get caught up on a week of wonder hacks. We don’t remember seeing a floppy drive headline the demoscene, but sure enough, there’s a C64 demo that performs after the computer is disconnected. What causes bench tools to have unreliable measurements? Sometimes a poor crystal choice lets AC ruin the party. We dive into the ongoing saga of the Audacity open source project’s change of ownership, and talk about generator exciter circuits — specifically their role in starting grid-scale generators from shutdown.
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!
Direct download (60 MB or so.)
Places to follow Hackaday podcasts:
Episode 127 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 6th ever.)
New This Week:
- End Of An Era: NTSC Finally Goes Dark In America
- Final Weekend for Work-From-Home Challenge of the Hackaday Prize
Interesting Hacks of the Week:
- NFC Who’s At The Door
- Fractal Vise Holds Odd-Shaped Objects Tight
- Tuning Into Medical Implants With The RTL-SDR
- Fixing Noisy Measurements On An Owon XDM2041 Bench Multimeter
- Raspberry Pi Cameras Stand In For Stereo Microscope
- C64 Demo, No C64
Quick Hacks:
- Mike’s Picks
- Elliot’s Picks:
0 Commentaires