Linux

Orange is the New ($15) Pi

Hackaday is writing that  Orange is the New ($15) Pi. And I must say that it looks promising. It looks like the very cheap Raspberry Pi like single board computer. Originally, the board cost about $30 but sports WiFi, a 1.6 GHz processor, 8 GB of flash, and a SATA interface. There’s now a reduced

USB reverse engineering tips

Do you want to know what happens in the USB devices? What data flows between your PC and your device? Here are some videos that show tips how you can figure out what data flows on your USB ports. Reverse Engineering USB Devices [28C3]   How to reverse engineer a USB protocol for Linux  

Happy Birthday, Linux!

Linux project was released on August 25, 1991. So Happy Birthday, Linux! An OS At 24. Now Linux is everywhere, even if you don’t see it. You use Linux when you search on Google, when you use your phone, when buy metro tickets, actually the whole Internet is powered by Linux.

USB2Serial Adapter As An I/O Device

I used to do uears ago I/O with different lines on RS-232 ports ans parallel ports in different PCs. Nowdays serial and parallel ports have almoat completely dissappeared, being often replaced with USB adapters in  applications where they are needed. USB2Serial Adapter As An I/O Device article tells how USB adapters can be used for