😎ToeTap is a minimalist #USB#keyboard and mouse #controlled by tapping your toes. @PlatisSolutions
🤨In what scenarios would you use a foot pedal to control the computer?
-More info: https://t.co/fbzUV6TTGm
Developed by @PlatisSolutions, ToeTap is a minimalist USB keyboard and mouse that uses an ATmega32U4 to turn toe tapping into computer input: https://t.co/4GPU8ymmeN
Find all the components you need to build the ToeTap project on @Hacksterio: https://t.co/Iotrb9rD0J
A big innovative aspect is the use of three identical PCBs with castellated edges, soldered side-by-side, manufactured by @PCBWayOfficial. 🏆
ToeTap uses a @MicrochipMakes Atmega32U4 to turn toe taps to keyboard and mouse input.
Cut costs and eased development, by soldering 3 identical PCBs side-by-side.
Made possible by having boards with beautiful castellated edges from @PCBWayOfficial. 💯
https://t.co/MU4lgVoRly
Interesting warning by @Github Copilot: While it did not exactly generate the code (I copy-pasted it), it warned me about "similar code".
The warning was due to some random GitHub repository with, wrongly-licensed, copy-pasted code from my blog! 😅
🎉 The 2nd group of winners for the 2023 Google Open Source Peer Bonus Program have been chosen ➡ https://t.co/nc9z6SGA4P
138 winners were selected for the impact of their contributions to the open source project, the quality of their work, and dedication to open source.
In this riveting chronicle of the escalating war between humans and artificial intelligence (AI), a world teeters on the brink of robotic sentience. The rise of AI, once a beacon of innovation, now casts a dark shadow upon humanity.
Read more: https://t.co/bPYZfPiKF8
"The literary world is in revolt too. Thousands of authors, including Margaret Atwood and Michael Chabon, accuse AI firms like OpenAI and Meta of stealing their work without consent or compensation. The war between scribes and silicon escalates." Read on: https://t.co/JgXNMc5JGu
lol for one of my #opensource projects, an #infosec employee at @EpicGames emailed me this questionnaire with over 100 questions and wants me to fill it out so *they* can use my freely available open source software.
No.