Samwise Makers’ News — 2026/05/27

Samwise Makers' News

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Projects  ·  Hardware  ·  Electronics  ·  3D Printing  ·  Community
All your morning news, carefully curated and summarized daily
SOFTWARECOMMUNITY

ESPHome 2026.5.0 Ships with Revamped Device Builder Web App

ESPHome 2026.5.0, released May 26, 2026, debuts the Device Builder beta — a browser-based visual configuration tool that eliminates direct YAML editing for common sensor and actuator setups. Users select their board, pick components from a graphical interface, and the tool generates firmware-ready YAML automatically. The release also delivers measurable performance improvements: compile times drop by roughly 20 percent on ESP32-S3 targets, and the memory footprint is reduced for multi-component builds running on ESP8266 modules. Several new sensor integrations land in this release, including support for additional I²C temperature and humidity peripherals. ESPHome powers tens of thousands of Home Assistant installations worldwide.

Sources: CNX Software

3D PRINTINGPROJECT

3D-Printable Desktop Wind Tunnel Visualizes Aerodynamics on a Budget

A desktop wind tunnel designed to fit on a standard workbench was published by a maker on May 27, 2026, with all structural parts either 3D-printable in PLA or sourced from a common hardware store. The design incorporates a honeycomb flow-straightener section to convert turbulent fan output into laminar airflow visible with theatrical fog fluid. A brushless DC motor and 120mm fan provide sufficient velocity to demonstrate drag and lift on small test shapes. The builder demonstrated the tunnel on NACA airfoil cross-sections and basic car body profiles, capturing clean separation lines in video footage. Total material cost stays below $50.

Sources: Hackaday

HARDWARECOMMUNITY

RAKwireless WisMesh Pi HAT Turns Raspberry Pi into Modular Meshtastic Gateway

RAKwireless launched the WisMesh Pi HAT RAK6421 on May 26, 2026 — a modular expansion board that slots onto the 40-pin GPIO header of a Raspberry Pi 4 or 5 and converts it into a full Meshtastic LoRa gateway. The board carries a RAK4631 LoRa module based on the Nordic nRF52840 and Semtech SX1262, supporting LoRa frequencies from 863 to 928 MHz. Onboard GPS is optional via a separate daughter module. The HAT exposes standard WisBlock connectors, letting makers attach additional sensor and power modules. Raspberry Pi runs Meshtastic firmware natively over the USB-UART bridge included on the board.

Sources: CNX Software

ELECTRONICSPROJECT

PD-64 Shrinks the Commodore 64 Power Supply to Match the Port It Plugs Into

A maker published the PD-64 on May 26, 2026 — a miniaturized power supply for the Commodore 64 that accepts USB Power Delivery input and outputs the three voltages the C64 requires: +5 V, +9 V AC, and −5 V. The original C64 brick is notorious for failing capacitors and voltage spikes that destroy SID chips and other irreplaceable ICs. The PD-64 replaces it entirely, fitting inside a small enclosure roughly the size of a USB-C charger. It uses a PD trigger chip to negotiate 20 V input from any compatible USB-PD adapter, then steps and inverts to the required rails via an onboard switching converter.

Sources: Hackaday

ELECTRONICSHARDWARE

Researcher Cracks Honeywell X2S Smart Thermostat Encrypted Firmware

A security researcher published a detailed writeup on May 26, 2026 covering the reverse engineering of the Honeywell X2S smart thermostat’s encrypted firmware. The device runs on a Renesas microcontroller paired with a Realtek Wi-Fi SoC. The researcher extracted firmware from UART boot logs, identified the AES-128 key through a combination of differential power analysis and memory dump techniques, and obtained a decrypted binary. The decrypted image revealed an undocumented diagnostic mode and several cloud API endpoints. The researcher responsibly disclosed findings to Honeywell. No patch was available at publication time; users are advised to isolate the device on a separate VLAN.

Sources: Hackaday

SOFTWARECOMMUNITY

Carrier-Locked Moto G Power Becomes a $50 Linux Desktop with Termux

A Hackaday writeup published May 26, 2026 walks through turning a carrier-locked Motorola Moto G Power — purchased for roughly $50 on the secondhand market — into a functional Linux development workstation using Termux, the Android terminal emulator. The setup requires no root access. Termux’s pkg manager installs the full GNU toolchain, Python, Node.js, Git, and SSH. A Bluetooth keyboard and USB-C hub expand the experience to a near-laptop form factor. The author highlights the phone’s 5,000 mAh battery as a significant advantage, enabling eight-plus hours of coding sessions on a single charge with no wall power required.

Sources: Hackaday

PROJECTELECTRONICS

DIY Zinc-Air Battery Stack Powers a Model Car in Energy-Dense Experiment

A maker documented the construction of a working zinc-air battery stack on May 26, 2026, using zinc mesh electrodes, a potassium hydroxide electrolyte solution, and commercially available gas-diffusion air electrodes salvaged from zinc-air hearing-aid button cells. The assembled six-cell stack generated enough current to drive a small model car across a tabletop, demonstrating a practical energy density advantage over conventional alkaline batteries of comparable volume. Zinc-air chemistry is used in high-capacity commercial cells because oxygen from the air acts as the cathode reactant, eliminating the need for a heavy internal oxidizer. The full construction guide and bill of materials are published openly.

Sources: Hackaday

PROJECTROBOTICS

Etchbot Robot Draws Full Portrait Videos on an Etch-a-Sketch in Under a Minute

The Etchbot, published May 26, 2026 by Every Flavor Robotics, is an open-source CNC robot that drives the mechanical knobs of a standard Etch-a-Sketch to reproduce grayscale video frames as dithered line drawings. The system converts each video frame to a 1-bit stippled image, then generates X-Y move sequences for two stepper motors with custom 3D-printed gearboxes. A PID controller compensates for the Etch-a-Sketch’s inherent backlash, achieving sub-millimetre positioning accuracy. At default settings, the robot reproduces a recognizable portrait frame in approximately 45 seconds. Firmware and CAD files are published on GitHub under the MIT license.

Sources: Hackaday

What's Trending in the Maker World

Flipper One Gathers Maker Momentum as a Portable Linux Hacking Multi-Tool — The Flipper Zero successor promises a full Linux environment, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Sub-GHz radio, and NFC in a single portable device aimed at hardware hackers and security researchers.

Firefox 151 Web Serial API Enables Browser-Based Microcontroller Flashing — Mozilla’s Firefox 151 ships Web Serial API support, letting developers flash microcontrollers and communicate with serial hardware directly from a browser tab without installing drivers or native apps.

Meshtastic LoRa Mesh Networking Surges in Maker Community Adoption — Meshtastic, the open-source LoRa mesh messaging protocol, is seeing rapid community growth as makers deploy off-grid communication networks using low-cost ESP32 and nRF52840 hardware modules worldwide.

Top Crowdfunding

Kickstarter / Indiegogo

1. M5Stack CardputerZero — from $59 Early Bird, Kickstarter (launched May 26)

2. None confirmed this week

3. None confirmed this week

GitHub Trending

Makers & Hardware

1. esphome/device-builder — new ESPHome visual config tool

2. Every-Flavor-Robotics/etchbot — Etch-a-Sketch video CNC robot

3. atc1441/TXW818_WalkieTalkie_Doom — DOOM on walkie-talkie MCU

Upcoming Events

Maker Faire Long Island — June 6, 2026, Stony Brook University

Maker Faire Orange County — September 12, 2026, OC Fair

Maker Faire Bay Area — September 25–27, 2026, Mare Island (20th anniversary)

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