вторник, 14 июля 2026 г.

Maxime Rivest has created a project similar to the Harry Potter diary of Tom Riddle, using the reMarkable Paper Pro tablet.

Write on the page with your pen. After a pause, the diary drinks your ink — your words fade into the paper — the page thinks for a moment, and an answer writes itself back in a flowing hand, stroke by stroke, then fades away.

No screen glow, no keyboard, no chat UI. Just ink appearing on paper.

The diary’s replies come from a vision LLM that reads your handwriting from the committed page (sent as an inline PNG).

See this Rust-based open source MIT licensed project on GitHub.



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Young participants on the front steps of the Children’s Art Carnival in Harlem (photo unknown, courtesy the Children’s Art Carnival) via Hyperallergic

Although Harlem is well-known as a cultural hub for Black artists of various mediums, it also has a history of being overlooked and underserved in comparison to other pockets of Manhattan, leading to grassroots organizations and community-based programs to fill the gaps the city often didn’t provide. The Children’s Art Carnival in Harlem is one of them. Hyperallergic shares the importance of the Children’s Art Carnival in Harlem and it’s history of motivating children to nurture their creativity.

In March 1969, at the first-ever Children’s Art Carnival in Harlem, artist, activist, and educator Betty Blayton-Taylor looked on as groups of children painted at easels and strung objects together to make hanging sculptures. Held in a garage provided by the Harlem School of the Arts, the event engaged artists to conduct workshops for local kids. “Children can just as well use their energy to be creative as destructive,” Blayton-Taylor told the New York Times in a 1969 interview. “They’re having fun and that’s what we want.”



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The American Wood Column Corp is located in Brooklyn, New York. It’s one of the last holdouts of old-school woodwork manufacturing in the city and is officially NYC’s last wood column factory. The family company’s CEO Thomas Lupo is quite candid and charming about the history and reality of the business, which will soon closer its doors.

Check out this wonderful video from filmmaker Joshua Charow.

And read more about the company in this recent piece from NY Magazine’s Curbed:

The tour continued to the compo room, which houses a library of more than 9,000 ornamental casts, some dating back to the 1800s. Hand-labeled by number, they are stored like books, floor-to-ceiling, on shelves commanding three sides of the room. Here, craftsmen mix the compo and pour it into molds. When they dry, the ornaments — scrolls, rosettes, medallions, nosegays, feathers, curlicues — can be pressed onto surfaces like walls and ceilings, even furniture.



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понедельник, 13 июля 2026 г.

On July 26, 2006, The Computer History Museum curator Dag Spicer received an unexpected email from Dortmund, Germany. It described what appeared to be a lost trove of rare computers abandoned in a warehouse in the town of Castrop-Rauxel.

The Museum’s collections committee agreed that a visit was necessary to see exactly what was there and if any of it might be worth adding to the Museum’s permanent collection. After resolving logistical hurdles, fellow CHM curator Alex Bochannek and I flew to Germany. What we found was astonishing.

Inside a three-story warehouse the size of a jet airplane hangar, we encountered hundreds of historical computing artifacts. Spanning from the 1930s punched card era to obscure Cold War-era Eastern Bloc systems to more modern German and European computing systems, the warehouse was a treasure trove, a real-world timeline of computing history.

See the article here and the video below:



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The 8-Bit Guy demonstrates a custom hardware setup to drive five separate displays from a single Commodore 128 computer.

By splitting RGBI signal lines and leveraging specific VDC register configurations, The 8-Bit Guy explores the potential for unique multi-monitor output and extends these experiments to IBM EGA hardware.

Check the video out below:



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A great entry-level wearables project that includes 3D printing and LEDs! Fire-up your 3D printer… it’s time to make a fun and glowy wearable! Print the parts below in any color plastic that suits your fancy – clear or natural PLA works great for the spikes. Check out the full guide in the Adafruit Learning System!





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воскресенье, 12 июля 2026 г.

INewImage 21 1 1


ADAFRUIT WEEKLY EDITORIAL ROUND-UP


We’ve got so much happening here at Adafruit that it’s not always easy to keep up! Don’t fret, we’ve got you covered. Each week we’ll be posting a handy round-up of what we’ve been up to, ranging from learn guides to blog articles, videos, and more.


SALE

Use the code Gleam15 for 15% off items from our Summer Nights gift guide Thursday July 9th through Tuesday July 14, 11:59 PM EDT!

Some restrictions apply. We cannot add the discount after your order is placed so please remember to use the code! We also do not permit the use of this discount code on purchase orders.

LEARN

NEW GUIDE: CircuitPython Chiptune Player


YOUTUBE

John Park’s CircuitPython Parsec: Nested Display Groups



3055 06New nEw NEWs From Adafruit is an email newsletter sent out once a week to subscribers only. It features new products, special offers, exciting original content, and more. Sign-up NOW for the Adafruit weekly Newsletter here: https://www.adafruit.com/newsletter



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