Hackaday
980 subscribers
15.8K photos
47K links
New posts from hackaday.com
Download Telegram
For various reasons, crypto mining has fallen to the wayside in recent years. Partially because it was never useful other than as a speculative investment and partially because other speculative …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/02/a-steam-machine-clone-for-an-indeterminate-but-possibly-low-cost/)
Benchmarking Windows Against Itself, from Windows XP to Windows 11
https://hackaday.com/2026/01/02/benchmarking-windows-against-itself-from-windows-xp-to-windows-11/
Despite faster CPUs, RAM and storage, today’s Windows experience doesn’t feel noticeably different from back in the 2000s when XP and later Windows 7 ruled the roost. To quantify this …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/02/benchmarking-windows-against-itself-from-windows-xp-to-windows-11/)
Before DOOM would run on any computing system ever produced, and indeed before it even ran on its first computer, the game that would run on any computer of the …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/03/zork-running-on-4-bit-intel-computer/)
An accessible 3D printer for metals has been the holy grail of amateur printer builders since at least the beginning of the RepRap project, but as tends to be the …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/03/printing-in-metal-with-diy-slm/)
Pickle Diodes, Asymmetric Jacobs Ladders, and Other AC Surprises
https://hackaday.com/2026/01/03/pickle-diodes-asymmetric-jacobs-ladders-and-other-ac-surprises/
While we’re 100 years past Edison’s fear, uncertainty, and doubt campaign, the fact of the matter is that DC is a bit easier to wrap one’s head around. It’s just …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/03/pickle-diodes-asymmetric-jacobs-ladders-and-other-ac-surprises/)
[Codeolences] tells us about the FORBIDDEN Soviet Computer That Defied Binary Logic. The Setun, the world’s first ternary computer, was developed at Moscow State University in 1958. Its troubled and …read more (https://hackaday.com/2026/01/03/the-setun-was-a-ternary-computer-from-the-ussr-in-1958/)