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Welcome! BoredReading is a fresh way to read high quality articles (updated every hour). Our goal is to curate (with your help) Michelin star quality articles (stuff that's really worth reading). We currently have articles in 0 categories from architecture, history, design, technology, and more. Grab a cup of freshly brewed coffee and start reading. This is the best way to increase your attention span, grow as a person, and get a better understanding of the world (or atleast that's why we built it).

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I've always wanted a good USB volume control, so I decided to design one.
over a year ago

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More from Opsbros

Nokia 5110 - Back from the dead. Part 1: Nostalgia

I loved my Nokia 5110 and I wonder if it was possible to breathe new life into this long-shelved and still-memed mobile phone. As it turns out, not only is it possible, but it's going to be a lot easier than I anticipated.

over a year ago 33 votes
Artemis 1 Countdown

I've been following the Artemis 1 Launch Schedule quite closely on a few forums and discussing it with serveral people, and I had been regularly posting updated DateandTime countdown links for the revised launch attempts. With the schedule chnages and scrubs that have happened lately, updating the times

over a year ago 13 votes
WiFi Binary Clock

Who doesn't love a classic Binary Clock? I remember getting one of these when I was in my 20's from ThinkGeek, and it was pride of place on my desk. LED's are a thing of beauty.

over a year ago 14 votes
IBM M13 Trackpoint USB Converter

Me, never not on the lookout for an opportunity to design something, whether needed or not, worked with @micon to design a module that could fit snugly in the keyboard, and provide a USB-C interface directly into the Keyboard/Mouse module.

over a year ago 16 votes
Debug Header

After watching a livestream by UnexpectedMaker struggling to put probe pins on his Stepper Motor driver connected to a Raspberry Pi, I thought a breakout header might help; so I whipped up this little board.

over a year ago 16 votes

More in technology

A homemade launchpad for compressed air-powered rockets

A conventional model rocket engine is simple combustible solid fuel (black powder or more advanced composites) molded into a cylinder that uses expanding gas to produce thrust. Though it is minimal, there is some danger there. An alternative is compressed gas, which will also expand to produce thrust — just without the explosive chemical reaction. […] The post A homemade launchpad for compressed air-powered rockets appeared first on Arduino Blog.

23 hours ago 3 votes
About the time I trashed my mother's laptop

Around 2003, my mother had a laptop: the Compaq Armada 1592DT. It ran Windows Me, the worst Windows to ever exist, whopping 96 MB of RAM, and a 3 GB hard drive. My mother used it for important stuff, and I played games on it. Given the limitations of the 3 GB hard drive, this soon lead to a conflict: there was no room to store any new games! I did my best to make additional room by running the disk cleaner utility, disabling unnecessary Windows features and deleting some PDF catalogues that my mother had downloaded, but there was still a constant lack of space. Armed with a lack of knowledge about computers, I went further and found a tool that promised to make more room on the hard drive. I can’t remember what it was, but it had a nice graphical user interface where the space on the drive was represented as a pie chart. To my amazement, I could slide that pie chart to make it so that 90% of the drive was free space! I went full speed ahead with it. What followed was a crash and upon rebooting I was presented with a black screen. Oops. My mother ended up taking it to a repair shop for 1200 EEK, which was a lot of money at the time. The repair shop ended up installing Windows 98 SE on it, which felt like a downgrade at the time, but in retrospect it was an improvement over Windows Me. I had no idea what I was doing at the time, but I assume that the tool I was playing with was some sort of a partition manager that had no safeguards in place to avoid shrinking and reformatting operating system partitions. Or if it did, then it made ignoring the big warning signs way too easy. Still 100% user error on my part. If only I knew that reinstalling Windows was a relatively simple operation at the time, but it took a solid 4-5 years until I did my first installation of Windows all by myself.

4 hours ago 2 votes
All the Switch 2 pricing questions I had last week are answered

Last week I wrote 2 main posts in reaction to the Nintendo Switch 2 announcement, and today we have new info on some of the open questions that lingered waaaay back then. Game-key cards I saw a remarkable amount of arguments against this new "physical" purchase option based

22 hours ago 2 votes
Odds and Ends #65: Economic growth is core to a progressive agenda

Plus the terrifying story of what actually happened to Boeing's Starliner capsule, and a terrible Star Trek opinion.

14 hours ago 2 votes
Meta got tricky with LLM benchmarks

Oh boy, Meta released their latest llama models this weekend (I guess because they leaked, hence the rushed weekend release?), and it benchmarked quite well on LMArena. However, as Kyle Wiggers reported for TechCrunch, not all may have been on the up and up: Meta’s Benchmarks for Its

8 hours ago 1 votes