This week, Editor-in-Chief Elliot Williams and Assignments Editor Kristina Panos convened in a secret location to say what we will about the choicest hacks of the past week. We kick things off by discussing the brand new Cyberdeck contest, which is the first of it’s type, but certainly won’t be the last. In other contest news, we recently announced the winners of the Hack it Back Challenge of the Hackaday Prize, which ran the gamut from bodysnatching builds to rad resto-mods and resto-recreations.
IBM’s Linkway, French edition. Très tubulaire, non?
Taking top honors in wow factor this week is [Stuff Made Here]’s jigsaw puzzle-solving robot. This monster can currently tackle small laser-cut puzzles, but is destined to solve an all-white 5000-piece nightmare once all the engineering pieces have come together.
Then we took a field trip to Zip Tie City, where the plastic’s green and the wiring’s pretty, admired volcano nuts from afar, and briefly considered the idea of a 3D printer with a heating zone of programmable length.
Finally, we take a look at a creatively destructive robot that’s akin to a useless machine, bloviate about books you should read, and dance around the topic of learning by playing.
Check out the links below if you want to follow along, and as always, tell us what you think about this episode in the comments!
Load Your Icebreakers, The 2022 Cyberdeck Contest Starts Now
2022 Hackaday Prize: Congratulations To The Winners Of The Hack It Back Challenge
If you know what that sound was, you should fill out the form here to win a t-shirt!
Solar Plane Might Be Able To Last Through The Night
Retrotechtacular: The Gossamer Condor
Solar Impulse 2 (HB-SIB) Solar Airplane
Student Competition Badge Bears Custom Silicon
Welcome To Ziptie City
Want Faster Extrusion But Don’t Have A Volcano? Nuts!
Converting An 80s Typewriter Into A Linux Terminal
Elliot’s Picks:
MCH2022 Badge CTF Solved, With Plenty To Learn From
Should’ve Used A 555 — Or 276 Of Them
Robot Repeatedly Rearranges Remnants In The Round
Kristina’s Picks:
Stewart Platform Wields Magic Fingers To Massage Your Scalp
3D Printed Braiding Machine Brings Back Some History
Hackaday Prize 2022: Saving The World, One Brew At A Time
Books You Should Read: The Hardware Hacker’s Handbook
Books You Should Read
Fumbling the future : how Xerox invented, then ignored, the first personal computer (Book, 1999) [WorldCat.org]