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Items tagged with: 3dprinting
Thought I'd be nice and gave my musiciansdice.com/ to a friend, who, it turns out, doesn't use them and appears incapable of sending them back.
So I found thingiverse.com/thing:5873940 and a number of other dice like intervals, rhythms, etc.. So I'm just going to do some #3dprinting for those.
The Musician's Dice
Home page of The Musician's Dice, a music-related company. 12-sided musical dice for composition, improv, and education. Random opportunities in music: it's how I roll!The Musician's Dice
This next 3D-printed project, though, is... maybe less cute: an animatronic Facehugger from the Alien franchise, which can be remote-controlled or react to movement.
hackster.io/news/this-autonomo…
The next version will, apparently, be able to jump(!)
#3DPrinting #SciFi #Props #Robot #Robotics #Technology #News #Hackster
This Autonomous Facehugger, Powered by an Espressif ESP32, Could Give an Alien Nightmares
Inspired by the Alien franchise, this 3D-printable Facehugger reacts to movement — or can be controlled remotely via Bluetooth.Gareth Halfacree (Hackster.io)
A lovely #AdventureTime build next, in the form of a #RaspberryPi-powered BMO running a Java-based "quasi-OS" that can play games, videos, and... err, sometimes farts.
hackster.io/news/this-bmo-buil…
#Technology #Emulation #Gaming #3DPrinting #News #Hackster
This BMO Build Brings Its Own "Quasi-OS" to Emulate Games, Play Videos — And Fart
Java-based BMOS provides a friendly user interface for a six-year-old in this smart Raspberry Pi-powered BMO build.Gareth Halfacree (Hackster.io)
Cleared my to-do queue for the day, and while there are still three articles waiting to be published over on #Hackster I'll round up the ones that are live now - starting with a project from Simon Carter to build an accessible radio which announces its tunings at the push of a button.
hackster.io/news/simon-carter-…
#Technology #Radio #News #3DPrinting #Makers
Simon Carter's Arduino-Powered FM Radio Has a Built-In Announcer for the Visually Impaired
Accessible radio uses a text-to-speech library to announce the current channel frequency for eyes-off use.Gareth Halfacree (Hackster.io)
