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Comments for Hackaday

Repairing A Pair Of Voodoo 2 GPUs For Some SLI Action AI The Truly Environmentally Friendly Way News Sites Are Blocking Internet Archive Over AI Scraping Fears How The 2020s Chip Crisis Led To A Buggy Saleae Analyzer In 2026 Evidence For Water Vapor Plumes On Europa Vanishes In Re-Analysis Mechanical Stability For Your Coils 3D Printed Hose Sprayer Sets Phasers To Suds The Merits Of Comment-Driven Development As Counterweight To TDD Building A Desktop Catalytic Cracker Process 4 Billion Pixels Per Second From 16 DIY Cameras For The Best V-Tubing Rig Ever An Unlikely Host For An 8080 Emulator Using Brand New NiMH Cells After Sitting 12 Years Unused Investigating The S3 Virge’s Reputation As A 3D Decelerator Card As It Turns Out, There’s More Than One Cassette Mechanism Being Made After All Using Windows 11 On An LGA 775 PC With AGP Videocard An Ethernet WiFi Router on a Pi Pico 2W This Week In Security: Messing With AI, 7Zip And Notepad++ Vulnerabilities, HTTP2 Bomb, And More Using Electrolysis For More Than Just Generating Hydrogen Vintage Turntable Gets Brain Transplant And Home Assistant Integration Connecting Your Car To Home Assistant Microsoft Claims 20 Second Qubits If You Want To Hack Me, Come In Through The Speaker Ways To Embed Magnets In 3D Prints And Not Ruin Printers An RGB Keyboard For Your Hackaday Communicator Badge Ask Hackaday: How Do You Feel About Electronic Shelf Labels? Make Your Ceiling Disappear With ADS-B And Short-Throw Projector Fixing A Nintendo Game Boy Clone That Runs Too Fast Web-Based Control For A CB Radio Distilling Stale Gasoline To Make It Usable Again DIY Ceramic Circuit Boards Surely Count As Solarpunk Texas Instruments Changes The NE5532 And Others Into Incompatible Versions Deltarune’s Tenna Brought To Life Linux Fu: Fake Webcams, GUI Edition Hydraulic Drive For Your Lawn Tractor But Just What Is This ‘Artificial Intelligence’? A Diffraction Grating Makes This Clock Readable Turning An Old 3D Printer Into A Vinyl Cutter For Cheap A High-Vacuum Controller For An Eventual Electron Microscope Does Your Terminal Speak Morse? This One Does From Scrappy Pallet Wood To Fancy Tea Tray The 2026 EMF Badge Arrives, With An Add-On. As Expected, It’s Familiar Linux Fu: Taming Strace STM32 Handheld Has OpenGL And All The Classics Jenny’s Daily Drivers: Microsoft Windows 11 Using A Mirror To 3D Scan Both Sides Of An Object At Once Cookies, Baked The 3D Printer Way Restoring Apple’s Terrible But Awesome IBook Laptop After The Dust Settles: Building Pebble Apps Bilingual E-paper News Feed Helps Brush Up Language Skills On The Wisdom Of Replacing A NiMH Module In A Prius Battery Pack Know Your Food: Cheesemaking Like A Wire Bender, But For Pop Tubes Revisiting Making Your Own Internet Router In 2026 Classically-named Argus Robot Is Terminator Meets Tumbleweed Making a Zippy FDM Printer out of Wood Off-Grid OCR Server Powered By IPhone Comment on A Special Type of Mower For Rocky Fields by Chris Maple 4-bit Relay Logic Counter Begs To Have Its Buttons Pushed Loading Sega Genesis Games Off A Vinyl Record Ebike Display Uses Reflective LCD Modern Graphics Via DisplayLink For Your ISA-Era PC The Final Steps To A Sub-Minute Benchy Poking Around With JTAG On A Guitar Amp Keychain GameCube Controller Made Functional Breaking Enigma With An FPGA, Just Like At Bletchley Park The Uncooperative Mirror Will Not Help You Testing Various Ways To Waterproof FDM Printed Parts Cheap Yellow Display With Boosted PSRAM Turned Snazzy Emulator Station It’s Another Pi Handheld. But It’s A Really Good One Take The Reins Of This Unique Controller Be Your Own Oil Company With Desktop Fischer-Tropsch Process ESP-Osito Eschews Retrocomputing For Modern Code On Modern, Equivalent Hardware A Modern Web Browser For Classic Mac OS Hackaday Podcast Episode 371: Space Computers, Spy Phones, And So Long CHU This Week In Security: Ubiquiti Fixes, And FreeBSD Joins The Club You Don’t Want To Join When Is An Apple Laptop Not A Macbook? When It’s An Apple II Linux Distributions And Who Is Responsible For The Software Autopsy Of A Failed Vintage Carbon Resistor Hunting Submarines Via Gravity Is A Tough Errand So Long, CHU, And Thanks For All The Time Signals A Bicycle Built On An Italian Renaissance Tech Base Linux Fu: The Bluetooth Regression Remember When Flash Drives Were Going To Make Your PC Faster? Putting Version 7.1 Of The Direct Granules FDM Extruder Through Its Paces Tech In Plain Sight: The Mechanics Of String Trimmers Between-Device Sharing Still Sucks Salvaged VFDs In Nixie-Like Clock Mod This IKEA Lamp Into Smart Lighting For Not A Lot Building And Testing A Turbine Driven Hydro Generator Tearing Down Walmart’s $12 Keychain Camera Biohack Your Way To Lactose Tolerance (Through Suffering) Liberating AirPods With Bluetooth Spoofing It’s Hard To Make A (Good) Oscillator Rudolph’s Sleigh On A North Pole PCB This Typewriter Types Toast Beating Bitlocker In 43 Seconds Using An Old Smartphone In Place Of A Raspberry Pi Working Model Reveals Amazing Engineering Of Webb’s Mirror Actuators Electric Vehicle 1900’s Style: New Leases On Old Tech Forth: The Hacker’s Language
Hackaday Links: May 31, 2026
Tom Nardi · 2026-06-01 · via Comments for Hackaday

If you’re located in the Northeast United States and thought you heard an explosion yesterday afternoon, it wasn’t just your imagination — multiple sources have now confirmed that a 1 meter (3 foot) meteor entered the Earth’s atmosphere and broke up in the air off the coast of Massachusetts, releasing the energy equivalent of 300 tons of TNT.

Well, maybe. The latest update from NASA says it might actually qualify as a meteorite, with radar data indicating that debris from the space rock may have fallen into Cape Cod Bay. For those unfamiliar, the difference between a meteor and a meteorite is whether or not any of the object survived its encounter with the atmosphere and made it down to the surface.

There’s an argument to be made that a larger asteroid would have likely set off some alarm bells as it approached the planet, but the fact that this deep space interloper showed up unannounced is a sobering reminder that our ability to detect incoming threats isn’t nearly as robust as we’d like. Fortunately, it looks like the event didn’t result in any serious damage or injury.

Magnet fishers in Cape Cod are stoked.

Speaking of mid-air threats, here’s a reminder of what not to do on an airliner: on Saturday a flight departing Newark airport for Spain had to turn around when it was discovered a Bluetooth device bearing the name “BOMB” was onboard. There was no actual explosive device found on the plane when it was searched upon its return, and reports are that the whole incident was the result of an Ill-conceived device name on a portable speaker.

The details on this one are interesting, as a first-hand account posted to Reddit would seem to indicate that both the flight crew and teams back at United Airlines headquarters in Chicago were able to see the Bluetooth devices on the plane in real-time. The passengers were actually given several chances to turn off their devices before the order was given to turn the plane around, and at one point the crew claimed they were even able to see the number of Bluetooth devices that were still active.

Admittedly, it could have been as simple as one of the crew members using an app on their phone to see how many discoverable Bluetooth devices they could pick up and reporting their findings back to the home office. But in the modern security climate, it’s not hard to imagine that the aircraft has some form of integrated Wireless Intrusion Detection System (WIDS). Something to keep in mind the next time they ask you to put your gadgets into airplane mode during takeoff.

It seems like every week we’ve been reporting on some service going dark, and today is no different. As pointed out by OMG Ubuntu, Canonical will be shutting down the Ubuntu Pastebin service in June. In fact, originally it was supposed to go offline today, but they’ve pushed the date back by a month due to the response from the community. Turns out giving your users just a few days to pack up their belongings before kicking them to the digital curb isn’t popular. Who knew?

Now granted Hackaday is geared more towards hardware than software, but a search through the database would seem to indicate we’ve never once run a post that linked to Ubuntu Pastebin in the 18 years the service has been available. Conversely, we had pages of results when searching our back catalog for instances of the classic pastebin.com. So we’re actually curious about this one and would love to hear from the readers: how many of you were actually using this service regularly, and will you miss it?

Finally, those in the market may be interested to hear that Wells Fargo will start offering mortgages for 3D printed homes produced by the Texas-based ICON Technologies. They’ve even got a special incentive program lined up for the extruded domiciles, offering a lender credit that can offset some of the closing costs.

A home being built with a massive 3D printer developed by ICON Technologies.

This might not sound like that big of a deal, but apparently most banks have been understandably skeptical of the technology and the long-term market for 3D printed homes up to this point. After all, it was just a few years ago that a recently completed 3D printed home in Iowa had to be demolished after the structure fell short of safety standards. As pointed out by CNBC, previous communities produced with ICON’s concrete printing technology had to be financed through the developer.

We’re still not sure that 3D printed homes make a whole lot of sense, but making the technology more accessible is surely a net positive. Even if the current state of the art in house squirting isn’t quite there, you know how the old saying goes: a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single layer.


See something interesting that you think would be a good fit for our weekly Links column? Drop us a line, we’d love to hear about it.