Matt Sengbusch builds unique arcade cabinets using components recovered and restored from classic arcade games. We visit his workshop to learn how he fixes game boards and designs these half-scale arcade cabinets to fit original parts like CRT monitors, coin slots, and full-sized controls.
External News
How the Sony Playstation Portable PSP Security was defeated | MVG
From a simple ‘Hello World’ program in March 2005 to the easy to install Custom Firmware we use today. This is the story of how Security on Sony’s first handheld – the PSP – was easily defeated and the game of cat and mouse between Sony and Hackers that ensued. Hackers won and ultimately the PSP became a completely open system for all revisions of its hardware.
ESP32-CAM Video Streaming and Face Recognition with Arduino IDE
This video is a quick getting started guide for the ESP32-CAM board. We’ll show you how to setup a video streaming web server with face recognition and detection in less than 5 minutes using the CameraWebServer example.
The Mosquito Hotend is… wild! #MRRF2019
Slice Engineering are making a hotend with a radical (and logical) design change over what we’ve been using on our 3D printers!
Awesome printers from #MRRF2019
Let’s check out the unique printers of the Midwest RepRap Festival 2019! We’ve got everything from the White Knight belt printer over a string-driven human scale machine down to a 2x2x2″ printer built from CD drives – for under $40!
How Motherboards Are Made (2019) | Taiwan Automated Factory Tour, ft. Gigabyte
Motherboard manufacturing is a refined process, but each board still takes upwards of an hour to finalize on the assembly line. About half of the assembly is now done by automated SMT lines, with the rest being manual quality checks and large component installation (like PCIe slots). As for how to make a video card, it follows exactly the same process — the difference is just which board is being fed through the machines on each day.