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The phone ecosystem these days is horribly boring compared to the innovation of a couple decades back. Your options include flat rectangles, and flat rectangles that fold in half and …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/02/phonenstien-flips-broken-samsung-into-qwerty-slider/)
If your school in the 1980s was lucky enough to have a well-equipped computer lab, the chances are that alongside the 8-bit machines you might have found a little two-wheeled …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/02/this-plotter-knows-no-boundaries/)
The first version of Pascal was released by the prolific [Niklaus Wirth] back in 1970. That’s 55 years ago, an eternity in the world of computing. Does anyone still use …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/02/the-case-for-pascal-55-years-on/)
Of the machines from the 16-bit era, the Commodore Amiga arguably has the most active community decades later, and it’s a space which still has the power to surprise. Today …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/02/an-amiga-demo-with-no-cpu-involved/)
[VWestlife] ended up with an obscure piece of 80s satellite TV technology, shown above. The Micro-Scan is a fairly plan metal box with a single “Tune” knob on the front. …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/03/reverse-engineering-mystery-tv-equipment-the-micro-scan/)
If there’s one certainty in life, it is that Nintendo Famicom and similar NES clone consoles are quite literally everywhere. What’s less expected is that they were used for a …read more (https://hackaday.com/2025/09/03/the-nintendo-famicom-reimagined-as-a-2003-era-family-computer/)