![]() Hugh-Jass liked Automatic Infinite 3D Printer.Hugh-Jass liked SolR - solar controller with power measurement.Hugh-Jass liked ZeroPhone - a Raspberry Pi smartphone.Hugh-Jass liked Raspberry Pi Smart Mirror.Hugh-Jass liked Open Source Kinect stand-alone 3D Scanner.Eric Hertz wrote a reply on project log Weird LCD backlighting.Eric Hertz wrote a reply on project log Lasers are for wusses.LuizFerr liked Polyformer - Ideal Filament Recycler.Anton on Protected Mode On A Z80! (Almost).Hiro+Protagonist on One Of The Worst Keyboards Ever, Now An Arduino Peripheral.codetoad on Less Is More When It Comes To Sensor Power.SteveS on Less Is More When It Comes To Sensor Power.Daniel A Glasser on Bare-Metal STM32: Setting Up And Using SPI.Mike on Bare-Metal STM32: Setting Up And Using SPI.Sean Taffert on Build Your Own Concrete 3D Printer.targetdrone on Mastercard’s New Card: Safer From Quantum Attacks?.Hackaday Podcast 190: Fun With Resin Printing, Tiny Tanks, Lo-Fi Orchestra, And Deep Thoughts With Al Williams 2 Comments Fortunately, the spacecraft is designed to withstand such slights, but the same cannot be said for Venus - these events have their way with Venus’ atmosphere, depleting it of gasses.Ĭontinue reading “Hackaday Links: September 11, 2022” → Posted in Hackaday Columns, Hackaday links, Slider Tagged arduino, coronal mass ejection, cyborg insects, moxie, solar orbiter, solar power, wonderwall Two days before the Orbiter was to reach its closest point to the spacious star, it spat a coronal mass ejection in the general direction of both Venus and the Orbiter (dibs on that band name), as if to say ‘boo’. In other, somewhat funnier space news - early last Sunday morning, the ESA’s Solar Orbiter was cruising by Venus as part of a gravity-assist maneuver to get the Orbiter closer to the Sun. The research team which includes MOXIE engineers report that although the solid oxide electrolysis machine has shown it can produce oxygen at almost any time or day of the Martian scale, they have not shown what MOXIE can do at dawn or dusk, when the temperature changes are substantial, but they say they have ‘an ace up (their) sleeve’ that will let them do that. Good news out of Mars from the little lunchbox that could - in the seven times that MOXIE has run since it arrived in February 2021, it has reached its target production of six grams of oxygen per hour, which is in line with the output of a modest tree here on Earth. ![]()
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