That's so cool… I'm a person with a disability and having everything all together one place would be awesome… would be also cool to have a virtual keypad that I could assign things to
What software do you suggest for home cameras? The only free one I could find only works on windows and is kinda shit. I really wanna change to Linux for that server but IDK what software to use.
That's a great build. I would not use an atx psu for various reasons (the load resister being one of them) but i fully understand your choice. That said, i am particularly impressed by your design
My guess is an incorrect character in the yaml file you edited. I guess this because that is what I did - I read a "1" as an "l" in the network card name and it lost my computer completely until I figured it out.
i think i will run my home server which i will use as a NAS on windows because i would easily get lost in linux, i definitely know my way around a windows machine
for a first time user of linux and setting up a server LOL i quit as soon as you started with the terminal NOT Beginner friendly SORRY will not be following you setup
Realistically, you're not pulling as much as younthink as long as you're not pushing it to its full. I run 4 rackmount Xeon servers and 2 q6600 core 2 quad cpu towers. They all run 24/7 and I'm on prepaid electricity. I spend about 25 dollars on electricity per month.
4:48 in some other videos and guides, people use a wire for the row connections instead of the diodes themselves. is there any reason to do one method over the other?
@@Djambo57 Thank you! I ended up using the diodes and it went smoothly, I'm connecting it to the micro controller now and this has been a great first project for me and I am learning a lot. I really appreciate this guide, the 3d files etc.!! Last question, I'm not the best at reading the schematic and with circuits so I'm a bit confused on 5:20 how to wire the reset switch. The switch I have has 3 pins "C", "NO", and "NC". I can't really tell from the video what the GND and RST pins are connected to or if both are wired to one pin?
Thank you so much for the guide. I do mentoring with a group of kids and this seems like a good cheap introduction to soldering, patience, flashing, 3d printing, while also getting them into the keyboard gremlin scene.
Man, ultra cool project! Just order the parts and I'll try to do it as a first arduino project. Kudos from Brazil, my man! Also, lots of pets on my behalf for the helper.
I'm putting together a server can you tell me if the specs are okay it's a ryzen 9 6900 HX 8core 16 thread 3.3 GHz base clock 4.9 GHz boost clock 32 GB of ddr5 dual channel 5600mhz sodimm a 1 TB m.2 nvme SSD and a 500 GB M.2 nvme SSD it has high speed ethernet Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 Windows 11 and an RX 6700 XT 12 gigabyte graphics card I want to run a thousand slot do you think that's possible
Why even have a text annotation if you show it just for a millisecond? So annoying if people do that. Interresting topic but I really hope that was a one off.
Very cool, i'm thinking on making one of these, but instead of opening n calculators, would be nice to open and close the calculator with the same key, how hard can it be? (Actual question)
one limit of this is that you can't tie your grounds of different voltages together, so if you have a circuit that needs 3.3v and 5v, it won't fly. You can't tie the grounds together because the volt-amp displays have to be between the load and ground, not the supply and ground. If you do tie them, your current readings will be wrong. I ran into this myself. My solution was to get some hall-effect current sensors and use an arduino to fake an analog output to the current measuring part of the circuit. Never got it quite calibrated though, other projects came up.