Digital Roundup – August 2024

Another month draws to a close, and it’s time to take stock of every article I’ve had published digitally over the past month.

The highlight of the month was, of course, the launch of the Raspberry Pi Pico 2 and its dual-architecture quad-core RP2350 microcontroller – one of a number of RISC-V design wins in August, as the free and open source instruction set architecture gains serious momentum. While some of the shine has been taken off the RP2350’s launch by the discovery of a hardware flaw, addressed in official erratum RP2350-E9, plenty of third parties have either pledged to adopt the part or have already launched hardware based around it.

Other topics of note this month include a great project from Guy Dupont to have a mouse play a game of Pong entirely in-firmware, relying on persistence of vision to have the cursor appear to be both bats and the ball simultaneously, Tim Alex Jacob’s work to give an existing LED badge design to the ability to be updated via flashing lights Timex DataLink-style, the impressive HaLiTerm Mini handheld, and an exerciser for your tired old floppy drives.

All this, and two newsletters to boot – what a month!

Digital Roundup – July 2024

July has rolled to a close, so it’s time to take stock of everything I’ve had published in digital outlets over the past calendar month – and, as always, it’s quite the list.

Highlights this month include a look at a calculator aimed at the microcontroller developer, booting Linux from a Google Drive filesystem, ensmartening a cheap off-the-shelf robot mower, a pocket-size DECStation emulator powered by the popular Raspberry Pi RP2040 microcontroller, the impressive Zeal 8-Bit Computer, a 3D-printed “Faux TRS-80,” and a magnetic exoskeleton for your hand – capable, its creators claim, of boosting your performance in games.

Not all news covered was good, though: Shapeways, a pioneer in 3D printing as a service and just-in-time manufacturing marketplaces, announced its bankruptcy this month.

Links for all my articles for July are available below, and there’s plenty more to come this August!

Digital Roundup – May 2024

Another month has passed, and it was a shorter one for me thanks to a week’s break with the family – and the kids’ first trip abroad, if you don’t count crossing the northern border into Scotland.

Despite this, I’ve had a bumper crop of articles published online in May. Highlights include the launch of the Raspberry Pi AI Kit, in partnership with Hailo, and the Raspberry Pi Connect browser-based remote access platform, Lex Bailey’s incredible Sinclair ZX Spectrum-powered laptop, Pineberry Pi’s relaunching as Pineboards as it looks to branch out from Raspberry Pi accessories, neuromorphic computing in space, a one-Euro RISC-V personal computer, and a project to encode sound as serial data and play it back with nothing more than a resistor and a capacitor.

My hands-on review on the unPhone, an educational tool which combines the core features of a smartphone bar the actual “phone” parts and lives at the heart of an Internet of Things course at the University of Sheffield, was published on Hackster.io too – and will be followed by additional reviews this June.

Digital Roundup – March 2024

March has been another busy month for digital work, with plenty of news coverage – everything from stealing a car with a Flipper Zero to the launch of the first 64-bit STMicro STM32 microcontrollers (which, confusingly, retain the “32” moniker) and Renesas’ first to feature its in-house proprietary RISC-V core design.

I’ve covered Andrew “bunnie” Huang’s continued work on the Infrared In-Situ (IRIS) silicon inspection project, a vacuum-tube PDP-8 clone, the third-generation “wafer scale” chip from Cerebras, and a 30-cubit quantum computer for your desk – in simulation, at least — along with an “invisible drone,” the KingKong edge AI camera system, and an “inception” attack against virtual reality users.

In chronological order:

Digital Roundup – February 2024

Another month has gone by, so it’s time to gather together everything I’ve written for digital publication over the past four-or-so-weeks.

It’s been a busy February, and a day longer than usual to boot, but if I had to pick some personal highlights they’d include this dual-display sunlight-readable PDA build, a tiny $5 mechanical keyboard, Paul Krizak’s amazing Wire Wrap Odyssey microcomputer, an anonymously-published 6,000 PPI boardview of the Nintendo Switch Lite, Wojciech Graj’s audio-only Doom port, and Tankgrrl’s Commodore 1541-style housing for a USB floppy drive.

Digital Roundup – January 2024

An increasing proportion of my work is now for publication online rather than in print, leading to this: the first in a new monthly round-up series covering all the articles I’ve had published over the past calendar month.