Here’s a quick tip for people learning how to solder small components: don’t rely on your eyes. Instead, solder by touch: use the force-feedback available through your fingertips. Human fingers can reliably detect bumps on the order of microns in size – much finer than the resolution of sight, even with the assistance of a decent microscope.| www.bunniestudios.com
Here’s a quick tip for people learning how to solder small components: don’t rely on your eyes. Instead, solder by touch: use the force-feedback available through your fingertips. Human fingers can reliably detect bumps on the order of microns in size – much finer than the resolution of sight, even with the assistance of a decent microscope.| www.bunniestudios.com
Here’s a quick tip for people learning how to solder small components: don’t rely on your eyes. Instead, solder by touch: use the force-feedback available through your fingertips. Human fingers can reliably detect bumps on the order of microns in size – much finer than the resolution of sight, even with the assistance of a decent microscope.| www.bunniestudios.com
Here’s a quick tip for people learning how to solder small components: don’t rely on your eyes. Instead, solder by touch: use the force-feedback available through your fingertips. Human fingers can reliably detect bumps on the order of microns in size – much finer than the resolution of sight, even with the assistance of a decent microscope.| bunnie's blog
The Ware for August 2025 is shown below. Thanks to Curtis Galloway for contributing this bit of nostalgia! This board has the look of one that was laid out by hand using masking tape or rubylith – back in the day before computers became affordable and powerful enough to regularly use them for making new […]| bunnie's blog
The Ware for July 2025 is a Vernier Lab Pro. While researching the ware with FETguy, we noticed that the OEM for the product is probably Inventec, which also made a line of products for TI calculators at the time. That particular OEM design team applied its design language in several products. I’ll give the prize to Jin who got the exact make and model of the board. Congrats, email me for your prize!| bunnie's blog
The Ware for July 2025 is shown below: Thanks to FETguy and Renew Computers in San Rafael, California for contributing this ware!| bunnie's blog
The Ware for June 2025 is a Gentner EFT-900A frequency shifter for radio audio applications. According to Chris Combs, “it lets two parties send and receive ‘full-range audio’, whatever that means, compressed and then decompressed via the usual 300-3500hz phone line”. Even though Per named the ware first, I will give the prize to Kienan because the response addresses the theory of operation of the ware – shifting the audio up/down by 250Hz so that low-end audio isn’t lost on analo...| bunnie's blog
The Ware for March 2025 is part of a Wekome WP-U157 “67 watt” GAN power supply.| www.bunniestudios.com
The ware for December 2024 is a 2mm pitch, 64×64 LED panel purchased from Evershine Opto Limited. Their sales part number is ES-P2-I, but the silkscreen says DCHY-P2-6464-1515-VP. The seller is just the name slapped on the box; like most commodity wares, there’s likely multiple channels offering the exact same make and model. So, I’ll accept any generic that more or less matches the spec as the winner.| www.bunniestudios.com
« Winner, Name that Ware, November 2024| bunnie's blog
The Ware for November 2024 is the NLP-16A by cherry-takuan. It’s a bespoke 16-bit CPU made entirely from 74HC00 NAND gates. | bunnie's blog
The Ware for October 2024 is shown below.| bunnie's blog