Many substances display crystallization, allowing them to keep adding to a basic shape to reach pretty humongous proportions.
Iomega’s Zip drives filled an interesting niche back in the 1990s. A magnetic disk that was physically floppy-sized, but much ...
Although the term ‘Iron Curtain’ from the Cold War brings to mind something like the Berlin Wall and its forbidding No Man’s Land, there was still active trade between the Soviet ...
Continuing the restoration of the #1 Lancashire boiler at the Claymills Pumping Station in the UK, the volunteers are putting ...
It seems that for as long as there have been readily available 3D printers, there have been moral panics about their being ...
Assembler syntax is a touchy subject, with many a flamewar having raged over e.g. Intel vs AT&T style syntax. Thus when [Humberto Costa] recently acquired an MSX system for some fun ...
It is a safe bet that nearly all Hackaday readers like to at least imagine what it would be like to build and live in an ...
Full-color 3D printing is something of a holy grail, if nothing else just because of how much it impresses the normies. We’ve ...
You would be very hard pressed to find any sort of CPU or microcontroller in a commercial product that uses anything but ...
Some FDM filaments are pretty brittle even if properly dried and stored, especially those which contain carbon fiber (CF) or ...
Recycling plastic at home using 3D printed molds is relatively accessible these days, but if you do not wish to invest a lot ...
Every ham radio shack needs a clock; ideally one with operator-friendly features like multiple time zones and more. [cburns42 ...