Welcome to my channel Mr Sagoo where you will learn how to make an idea with your own hands. Is it really possible to build a ...
You thought we forgot about your favorite Hackaday comment game, didn’t you? Well, not only is ‘Real or Fake?’ back with a new installment, but this time it ...
Off the show floor, I finally had a chance to take these two scooters for a spin. They’re made by Brooklyn-based (and ...
Speaking to the Hollywood Creative Alliance heading into The Astra Awards, a representative for Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no ...
Precision motion systems enable highly accurate and repeatable movements crucial for handling delicate semiconductor components. Collaborations like Kenmec and Neura Robotics aim to automate back-end ...
Crypto didn’t just have a good year in 2025. It thrived in ways that would have seemed like wishful thinking only a couple of years ago when banks shunned it as a liability, and Gary Gensler’s ...
You may have only recently heard about Demis Hassabis. He’s been named one of Time magazine’s “AI architects,” won a Nobel Prize for using the technology to predict protein folding and runs Google’s ...
A The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom player has harnessed the power of a handy glitch to create the game’s first perpetual flying machine, which makes use of zero batteries or despawning parts.
Whether plastic or metal, every kind of gear loses its luster and capabilities in time. Wear and tear erode them in various ways, leading to performance declines. Fortunately, knowing the most ...