Hackaday editors Elliot Williams and Mike Szczys get caught up on the week that was. Two builds are turning some heads this week; one uses 60 Nixie tube bar graphs to make a clock that looks like the sun’s rays, the other is a 4096 RGB LED Cube (that’s 12,288 total diodes for those counting at home) that leverages a ton of engineering to achieve perfection. Speaking of perfection, there’s a high-end microphone built on a budget but you’d never know from the look and the performance — no wonder the world is now sold out of the microphone elements used in the design. After perusing a CNC build, printer filament dryer, and cardboard pulp molds, we wrap the episode talking about electronic miniaturization, radionic analyzers, and Weird Al’s computer.
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 (55 MB)
Episode 144 Show Notes:
What’s that Sound?
- That sound was Teenage Mutant Ninja Nurtles: Turltes in Time, Sewer Surfin’ theme song
- [OliveGarden] was randomly drawn from 10 correct responses and wins the shirt!
New This Week:
- This Week in Security has news of a PS5 master key dump
Interesting Hacks of the Week:
- Cheap DIY Mic Sounds (And Looks) Damn Good
- Pulp-Molding: A Use For Cardboard Confetti
- Most FDM Printers Are Also Filament Dryers (with A Little Help)
- Not Your Average Nixie Tube Clock
- DIY CNC Uses Lots Of 3D-Printed Parts
- Big RGB LED Cube You Can Build Too
Quick Hacks:
- Elliot’s Picks
- Mike’s Picks:
Can’t-Miss Articles:
- Teardown: Analog Radionic Analyzer
- Smaller Is Sometimes Better: Why Electronic Components Are So Tiny
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