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1 Family Secrets: Chris Pratt & Millie Bobby Brown Share Stories From Set 22:08
Ep 313: Capacitor Plague, Wireless Power, and Tiny Everything
Manage episode 472613130 series 2470220
We're firmly in Europe this week on the Hackaday podcast, as Elliot Williams and Jenny List are freshly returned from Berlin and Hackaday Europe. A few days of mingling with the Hackaday community, going through mild panic over badges and SAOs, and enjoying the unique atmosphere of that city.
After discussing the weekend's festivities we dive right into the hacks, touching on the coolest of thermal cameras, wildly inefficient but very entertaining wireless power transfer, and a restrospective on the capacitor plague from the early 2000s. Was it industrial espionage gone wrong, or something else? We also take a moment to consider spring PCB cnnectors, as used by both one of the Hackaday Europe SAOs, and a rather neat PCB resistance decade box, before looking at a tryly astounding PCB blinky that sets a new miniaturisation standard.
In our quick roundup the standouts are a 1970s British kit synthesiser and an emulated 6502 system written in shell script, and in the can't-miss section we look at a new contender fro the smallest microcontroller, and the posibility that a century of waste coal ash may conceal a fortune in rare earth elements.
320 episoder
Manage episode 472613130 series 2470220
We're firmly in Europe this week on the Hackaday podcast, as Elliot Williams and Jenny List are freshly returned from Berlin and Hackaday Europe. A few days of mingling with the Hackaday community, going through mild panic over badges and SAOs, and enjoying the unique atmosphere of that city.
After discussing the weekend's festivities we dive right into the hacks, touching on the coolest of thermal cameras, wildly inefficient but very entertaining wireless power transfer, and a restrospective on the capacitor plague from the early 2000s. Was it industrial espionage gone wrong, or something else? We also take a moment to consider spring PCB cnnectors, as used by both one of the Hackaday Europe SAOs, and a rather neat PCB resistance decade box, before looking at a tryly astounding PCB blinky that sets a new miniaturisation standard.
In our quick roundup the standouts are a 1970s British kit synthesiser and an emulated 6502 system written in shell script, and in the can't-miss section we look at a new contender fro the smallest microcontroller, and the posibility that a century of waste coal ash may conceal a fortune in rare earth elements.
320 episoder
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1 Ep 315: Conductive String Theory, Decloudified Music Players, and Wild Printing Tech 41:35


1 Ep 314: It's Pi, but Also PCBs in Living Color and Ultrasonic Everything 1:11:20


1 Ep 313: Capacitor Plague, Wireless Power, and Tiny Everything 55:11


1 Ep 312: Heart Attacks, the Speed of Light, and Self-balancing 1:08:50


1 Ep 311: AirTag Hack, GPS Rollover, and a Flat-Pack Toaster 1:04:39


1 Ep 310: Cyanotypes, Cyberdecks, and the Compass CNC 41:50


1 Ep 309: Seeing WiFi, A World Without USB, Linux in NES in Animal Crossing 1:02:46


1 Ep 308: The Worst 1 Ever, Google's Find My Opened, and SAR on a Drone 48:50


1 Ep 307: CNC Tattoos, The Big Chill in Space, and PCB Things 48:40


1 Ep 306: Bambu Hacks, AI Strikes Back, John Deere Gets Sued, and All About Capacitors 59:28


1 Ep 305: Caustic Clocks, Practice Bones, and Brick Layers 51:00


1 Ep 304: Glitching the RP2350, Sim Sim Sim, and a Scrunchie Clock 59:04


1 Ep 303: The Cheap Yellow Display, Self-Driving Under $1000, and Don't Remix that Benchy 49:16


1 Ep 302: Scroll Wheels, Ball Screws, and a New Year for USB-C 1:02:24


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