
It’s Independence Day here in the USA, but if you’re not a fan of fireworks and hot dogs, Elliot and Dan’s rundown of the best hacks of the week is certainly something to celebrate. Rest easy, because nothing exploded, not even the pneumatic standing desk that [Matthias] tore into, nor the electroplated 3D prints that [H3NDRIK] took a blowtorch to. We both really loved the Ploopiest knob you’ve ever seen, which would be even Ploopier in anodized aluminum, as well as an automatic book scanner that takes its job very seriously. We looked into the mysteries of the Smith chart, another couple of fantastic student projects out of Cornell, the pros and cons of service loops, and what happened when the lights went out in Spain last Spring. And what does Janet Jackson have against laptops anyway?
Download this entirely innocent-looking MP3.
Episode 327 Show Notes:
News:
- Supercon CFP Extended
- Announcing The 2025 Hackaday One Hertz Challenge
What’s that Sound?
- Fill out this form for your chance to win!
Interesting Hacks of the Week:
- Open-Source Knob Packed With Precision
- Standing Desk Uses Pneumatics To Do The Job
- Data Visualization And Aggregation: Time Series Databases, Grafana And More
- A Scanner For Arduino-Powered Book Archiving
- Audio Localization Gear Built On The Cheap
- Meet Cucumber, The Robot Dog
- Blowtorching Electroplated 3D Prints For Good Reason
Quick Hacks:
- Elliot’s Picks
- Dan’s Picks:
Can’t-Miss Articles:
- One Laptop Manufacturer Had To Stop Janet Jackson Crashing Laptops
- The 2025 Iberian Peninsula Blackout: From Solar Wobbles To Cascade Failures
This articles is written by : Fady Askharoun Samy Askharoun
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