Check out their show-and-tell video after the break. Well, that was until shipment was delayed due to manufacturing issues. Not to fret, he transitioned over to a router board which displays the arrival countdown for mass transit bus service. He based the build on a web page the Transport for London provided. You can load it up and see if your bus is running on time or not. The next step is building a standalone device to pull the data and display it.
This longtime favorite has a serial port header which can be driven from the Linux kernel. The wooden frame seen above hosts a parabolic reflector making up one side of a wireless network link. This is a Fab Lab project called FabFi which uses common networking hardware to setup long-distance wireless Ethernet connections. The node above manages to complete a connection spanning 2. One of the core values of the project is to develop hardware that is easy to build with limited resources, then to make that knowledge freely available.
These handy little inexpensive devices can be configured for a near endless amount of networking tasks. The reader will learn about the WRT54G's hardware components, the different third-party firmware available and the differences between them, choosing the firmware that is right for you, and how to install different third-party firmware distributions.
Never before has this hardware been documented in this amount of detail, which includes a wide-array of photographs and complete listing of all WRT54G models currently available, including the WRTSL54GS. Once this foundation is laid, the reader will learn how to implement functionality on the WRT54G for fun projects, penetration testing, various network tasks, wireless spectrum analysis, and more!
Thanks, Eric! IM and chat rooms are old. So's Ted. He shipped his first commercial app in , which ran on a WANG His first public domain software was a quad-density Epson printer driver for the Commodore 64 GEOS operating system, hand-coded in assembler. Amigas were his favorite computers, although PCs are getting better. He ran the electrical plant on a nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine until the Russians gave up, and then there wasn't any challenge in it any more.
He has coded with "ohs. The time never needs to be set, as it is synched from the internet. The circuit for actually driving the display is based off a PIC, but it was changed to run off an Arduino. This thing can be controlled over the internet, or by laptop with a range of about meters.
He has supplied information for both. The truck has been mostly gutted, leaving only the chassis and electronics. He had to beef up some of the truck electronics when they fried under the load.
The entire unit is powered by a pair of 7. The most important thing on the list though, is the horn.
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