Join Hackaday Editors Elliot Williams and Tom Nardi as they review some of their favorite hacks and projects of the past week. The episode starts with a discussion about the recently announced Artemis II crew, and how their mission compares to the Apollo program of the 1960s and 70s.
From there, the pair theorize as to why Amazon’s family of Echo devices have managed to evade eager hardware hackers, take a look at a very impressive SMD soldering jig created with some fascinating OpenSCAD code, marvel at the intersection of art and electronic design, and wonder aloud where all the cheap motorized satellite dishes are hiding. Stick around for some questionable PCB design ideas, a Raspberry Pi expansion that can read your mind, and the first flight of a (semi) hydrogen-powered aircraft.
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!
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NASA Names Astronauts to Next Moon Mission
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Squeezing Secrets Out Of An Amazon Echo Dot
GitHub – xyzz/amonet: A bootrom exploit for MediaTek devices
Amazon Echo Gets Open Source Brain Transplant
How Has Amazon Managed To Make Hackers Love Alexa?
Don’t Toss That Bulb, It Knows Your Password
A Soft Soldering Jig For Hard Projects
No Wonder These Projects Won the Circuit Sculpture Contest
New Expansion Module Brings Standard Slots To Ancient Laptop
3D Printed Post Modern Grandfather Clock
See Satellites In Broad Daylight With This Sky-Mapping Dish Antenna
Elliot’s Picks:
Silkscreen Busy? Put Labels Inside Pads
Truly Flexible Circuits Are A Bit Of A Stretch
A Compact Camera Running Linux? What’s Not To Like!
Tom’s Picks:
Classic Film Camera Goes Digital With Game Boy Tech
Server Network Cards Made Extra Cool
PiEEG Offers Affordable Brain-Computer Interface
Why A Community Hackerspace Should Be A Vital Part Of Being An Engineering Student
“Makerspace” Trademark Application Rejected