

Patrick LeBoutillier has updated components for the project titled Flash 6502.Patrick LeBoutillier has updated the project titled Flash 6502.Patrick LeBoutillier has updated the log for Flash 6502.David Matthew Mooney has updated the project titled Inclined clothesline.bootstrap on A Private View Of A Public Transport Sign.bootstrap on Bicycle Inner Tube Becomes Rugged Pencil Case.SparkyGSX on Emulate Any ISA Card With A Raspberry Pi And An FPGA.GotNoTime on Emulate Any ISA Card With A Raspberry Pi And An FPGA.GotNoTime on Bringing Up An Old Motherboard Is A Delicate Process.Yet Another Robert Smith on The Importance Of Physical Models: How Not To Shoot Yourself In The Foot Or Anywhere Else.d on The Importance Of Physical Models: How Not To Shoot Yourself In The Foot Or Anywhere Else.Mike R on Dial-Up Internet Over WhatsApp.Grawp on Dial-Up Internet Over WhatsApp.chango on Emulate Any ISA Card With A Raspberry Pi And An FPGA.Keebin’ With Kristina: The One With The Pumpkin Keyboard 8 Comments Posted in Microcontrollers, Video Hacks Tagged oled, transparent oled, volumetric display Post navigation Another favorite of ours is a volumetric display that spins a helix-shaped projection screen. We just saw one last week that spun an LED matrix to form cylindrical display. If you can’t find your own transparent displays, spinning things are a popular trend in this area. Kudos for expanding the awesome of the build with an implied backstory! The form factor lends an aesthetic of an augmented reality device and the production approach for the video puts this in a Bladerunner or Johnny Mnemonic universe. The rest of the built is fairly straight-forward with a Feather M4 board driving the ten screens via SPI, and an MPU-6050 IMU for motion input. Why is it we don’t see more of these? Anyone know if it’s possible to remove the backing from other OLED displays to get here. has gotten his hands on some transparent OLED panels and with some Duck-Duck-Go-Fu we think it’s probably a Crystalfontz 128×56 display. These small OLED displays are all over the place but they share a common element: a dark background over which the pixels appear. Here delivered that ability with a stack up of ten screens to add a depth element. The trick of a volumetric display is the ability to add a third dimension for positioning pixels. Beyond a traditional project show and tell, he’s spun together a cyberpunk vibe to premiere the volumetric display he built from an OLED stackup. Is out with his latest video and it’s a piece of art in itself.
