In case you haven’t been reading Hackaday for the last few weeks ... One of the amazing hackers we invited to give a talk was [Quinn Dunki], creator of Veronica, the modern 6502 computer ...
When it came time to try out some old-school computing [Quinn Dunki] grabbed a 6502 processor and got to work. For those that are unfamiliar, this is the first chip that was both powerful ...
[Quinn Dunki] got some free stuff from Element14 to evaluate, including this Mircrochip WiFi module. It’s been used as the centerpiece of an Arduino shield in the past, and she grabbed a copy of ...
[Quinn Dunki]’s Veronica, a homebrew computer based on the 6502 CPU, is coming along quite nicely. She’s just finished the input board that gives Veronica inputs for a keyboard and two old ...
It’s not really conceived as a spy cam, but it could be. [Quinn Dunki] built this tiny time-lapse camera project with racing in mind. She’s involved in a group that endurance races clunkers ...
The original builder had since gone AWOL so the considerable talents of [Quinn Dunki] were brought to bear in getting it working again. Cracking open the black control box of mystery revealed an ...
The demo gods have smote [Quinn] a mighty blow, in front of a class at Stanford, no less. [Quinn]’s scratch-built computer, Veronica, failed to boot in front of a hall of eager students.
It seems strange that RAM is being added to a computer so late in the build, but [Quinn Dunki] must have had it in the back of her mind the whole time because it turns out to be a rather painless ...
[Quinn Dunki] did just that with an irresistible ... and what makes them particularly interesting to this Hackaday scribe’s eye is their choice of frequency. She finds a crystal with a VHF ...
[Quinn Dunki] did just that with an irresistible ... and what makes them particularly interesting to this Hackaday scribe’s eye is their choice of frequency. She finds a crystal with a VHF ...
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