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Crystal Set & One Tube Radio Plans Plans & Instructions
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open-source monitoring solution.
SigNoz is an open-source observability platform native to OpenTelemetry with logs, traces and metrics in a single application. An open-source alternative to DataDog, NewRelic, etc. Open source Application Performance Monitoring (APM) & Observability tool
In this post I want to give some love to an open-source project that I have discovered just a few months ago: SigNoz.
[Heath Paddock] wanted to confound his friends with a game that mimics an escape room in a box. About six months after starting, he had this glorious thing completed. It’s a hardware version of a game called Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes where players have five minutes to defuse a suitcase bomb. This implementation requires at least two players, one with the box-bomb itself, and one who holds all the knowledge but can’t see the box-bomb to defuse it.
There are plenty of hobbies around with huge price tags, and ham radio can certainly be one of them. Experienced hams might have radios that cost thousands of dollars, with huge, steerable antennas on masts that can be similarly priced. But there’s also a side to the hobby that throws all of this out of the window in favor of the simplest, lowest-cost radios and antennas that still can get the job done. Software-defined radio (SDR) turned this practice up to 11 as well, and this radio module uses almost nothing more than a microcontroller to get on the air.
The design uses the capabilities of the Raspberry Pi Pico to handle almost all of the radio’s capabilities. The RF oscillator is driven by one of the Pico’s programmable I/O (PIO) pins, which takes some load off of the processor. For AM and SSB, where amplitude needs to be controlled as well, a PWM signal is generated on another PIO which is then mixed with the RF oscillator using an analog multiplexer. The design also includes a microphone with a preamplifier which can be fed into a third PIO; alternatively it can receive audio from a computer via the USB interface. More processor resources are needed when generating phase-modulated signals like RF, but the Pico is still quite capable of doing all of these tasks without jitter larger than a clock cycle.
Stream-Pi runs on multiple platforms; Windows, MacOS, Android, iOS and Linux. This also includes ARM Systems like Raspberry Pi.
How to Build a Raspberry Pi Pico-Powered Stream Deck Keypad
Tinkercad is a free, easy-to-use app for 3D design, electronics, and coding
Remote switches and loggers
These switch kits are the output from an effort to keep myself busy while on COVID-19 lockdown. I originally intended to just teach myself how to program and interface with various types of microcontrollers (PIC, Arduino, etc.). So, I bought several of the newbie training kits off of eBay and went to town. After exhausting all the built-in exercises, I went looking for a project where I could use my new-found knowledge.
I had owned an Ameritron RCS-12 remote antenna switch for many years and had always wondered how they selected antennas by simply pushing a momentary pushbutton switch. After opening up the controller, my suspicions were confirmed that a microcontroller was at the heart of the design. So, I decided to attempt to recreate the unit’s features that I used most as a breadboard project.