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14:01
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Hack a Day
From what we’ve seen we’d say [Jianyi Liu] is really good at etching PCBs at home. Now you can learn from his experience. He just published a mammoth guide to fabricating your own PCBs at home. That link goes to his index page which leads to all eight parts of the guide. He starts off by [...]
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14:01
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Hack a Day
So you picked up your very own Stellaris Launchpad, a TI ARM dev board which can be in your hands for just five bones. They do distribute several free IDEs which are not size-limited but perhaps you’re more of a text editor and command line sort of person. Well you’re in luck. There’s now a [...]
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14:01
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Hack a Day
[Tom Ladyman] is making the case that a robot can take the place of a guide dog. According to his presentation, guide dogs cost about £45,000 (around $70k) to train and their working life is only about six years. On the other hand, he believes that this robot can be put into service for about £1,000 (around [...]
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15:01
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Hack a Day
Learning to lay out a printed circuit board takes some time. But after you’ve churned out a few it’s really pretty easy. If you find yourself at that point it may be time to learn about more complicated board fabrication. We think a good primer is this multi-layer PCB layout guide which [Rik te Winkel] [...]
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10:01
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Hack a Day
For those that have always felt a bit treppidatious when approaching SMD, you can relax. Here’s a simple guide to walk you through your first shaky steps into surface mount devices. Distributed freely under the creative common license, the Manga Guide to SMD is an 18 page comic that has a goal of making SMD [...]
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5:00
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Hack a Day
It may be a week after the fact, but former Hackaday alum and inventor of the Bus Pirate [Ian Lesnet] made a great guide to the Bay Area Maker Faire. The San Francisco-area Maker Faire attracts 100,000 makers, tinkerers, hackers, and general geeks to a bazaar of DIY and generally cool stuff. All the regulars were [...]
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10:01
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Hack a Day
Get ready to join a band. Just follow the guide over at the Moppy project page and you’ll have your very own floppy drive instrument. The name is a mashup between Musical and Floppy. By using an Arduino UNO as a translator, you can command an array of floppy drives with a musical keyboard (think [...]
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8:01
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Hack a Day
If you’ve ever thought about getting down to bare metal and building a homebrew computer from scratch [Garth Wilson] put up a great primer to the 6502, the same CPU found in Apple ][ computers, BBC Micros, Vic-20s, and the venerable Commodore 64 (a 6510 in the C64, but it's close enough). In his guide [...]
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9:01
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Hack a Day
Whatever your reasons may be, if you’re going to be holding a camera for long periods of time this shoulder mount will both steady the image, and help save you some aches and pains. [Kyle Jason] built the rig seen above for just $20 by following this guide. [Knoptop] published the guide about a year [...]
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12:57
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Hack a Day
Regular reader [MS3FGX] recently wrote a guide to compiling OpenWRT from source. You may be wondering why directions for compiling an open source program warrant this kind of attention. The size and scope of the package make it difficult to traverse the options available to you at each point in the process, but [MS3FGX] adds [...]
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6:03
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Hack a Day
The folks over at LoveElectronics recently published an article that explains some of the ins and outs of magnetometers for those who are interested in trying one out, but might not understand how to use them. A good part of the article focuses specifically on how to manipulate the HMC5883L magnetometer from Honeywell, but a [...]
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8:07
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Hack a Day
[Sergio Campamá] wrote in to tell us he’s assembled a guide for compiling the latest release of MSPGCC. This is a cross-compiling tool chain for the popular MSP430 line of microncontrollers. We used a version available from the Ubuntu repositories when developing with the TI Launchpad and the eZ430-F2013. Installing from repositories is easy, but [...]
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7:01
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Hack a Day
[Rajendra Bhatt] wrote in to share a tutorial he put together demonstrating the basics of using LED dot matrix displays. While this subject might be old hat to many out there, his helpful walkthroughs are geared more towards beginners who are exploring various electronics concepts for the first time. He explains the theory behind LED [...]
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5:03
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Hack a Day
[Marcus] wrote a guide to using TouchOSC to control your projects. He sent a link to us after reading our feature about using Open Sound Control for Arduino without an Ethernet shield. He’s been using that method for quite some time now, but takes it one step further by using a smartphone as a control [...]
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13:15
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Hack a Day
[Q] wrote in to let us know about the AVR-Guide he’s been working on. It looks like he’s finished posting about 80% of the content he planned for in his initial draft outline. We read through several of the sections and found them to be concise, yet able to present information in a way that’s [...]
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13:00
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Hack a Day
If you’re thinking of working with carbon fiber this guide should be a big help. The example is aimed at the automotive crowd but the principles transfer quite easily. Carbon fiber parts are constructed in a similar manner as fiberglass parts. A mold is covered in a release agent, the fibers are put in place [...]
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9:00
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Hack a Day
If you ever wanted to incorporate tank treads into one of your build you should check out this guide. The method shown above is our favorite, which uses rubber fuel line hose and #10 machine bolts to hold together two lengths of hollow-pin roller chain. You can see the drive sprocket is keyed into the [...]
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14:30
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Hack a Day
[PT] let us know about a fantastic guide to taking better photographs of your projects. It’s a hefty read but well worth the effort. Author [Johngineer] helps us understand how to use simple (and possibly inexpensive) tools like lights, mirrors, and a background material. He also gives some tips on how to recognize what your [...]
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7:00
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Hack a Day
[Bhautik] is back again with more tilt-shift photography. This time, hes brought us a quite in depth guide to tilt-shift photography. He covers the technical side of how tilt-shift works, showing the differences in several methods. There is a breakdown of different cameras and ease of modification as well as links to several of his [...]
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22:03
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Packet Storm Security Misc. Files
Whitepaper called A Serious Newbie's Guide to the Underground v2. This is a continuation of ratdance's original Newbie's guide to the underground.
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22:03
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Packet Storm Security Recent Files
Whitepaper called A Serious Newbie's Guide to the Underground v2. This is a continuation of ratdance's original Newbie's guide to the underground.
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11:57
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remote-exploit & backtrack
Hello,
First time i want to greetings for all master here, i'm a newbie using backtrack. I need a little guide if u don't mind.
I try to pentest wpa2 and i get a handshake to bruteforce, but seems like a dictionary from backtrack cannot found the pasphrase, so i download a completed dictionary ..
and the problem is the dictionary that i download is too big to read by memory, and aircrak pass this dictionary. this dictionary size is 20 GB.
My question is how can i use this dictionary with aircrack ?. i try to view this with all editor and no one can open it. Thank you for your guide. :confused: