Vista Normal

Hay nuevos artículos disponibles. Pincha para refrescar la página.
Ayer — 1 Julio 2024Salida Principal

Hackaday Links: June 30, 2024

1 Julio 2024 at 05:00
Hackaday Links Column Banner

A couple of weeks back we featured a story (third item) about a chunk of space jetsam that tried to peacefully return to Earth, only to find a Florida family’s roof rudely in the way. The 700-gram cylinder of Inconel was all that was left of a 2,360-kg battery pack that was tossed overboard from the ISS back in 2021, the rest presumably turning into air pollution just as NASA had planned. But the surviving bit was a “Golden BB” that managed to slam through the roof and do a fair amount of damage. At the time it happened, the Otero family was just looking for NASA to cover the cost of repairs, but now they’re looking for a little more consideration. A lawsuit filed by their attorney seeks $80,000 to cover the cost of repairs as well as compensation for the “stress and impact” of the event. This also seems to be about setting a precedent, since the Space Liability Convention, an agreement to which the USA is party, would require the space agency to cover damages if the debris had done damage in another country. The Oteros think the SLC should apply to US properties as well, and while we can see their point, we’d advise them not to hold their breath. We suppose something like this had to happen eventually, and somehow we’re not surprised to see “Florida Man” in the headlines.

There was a little hubbub this week around the release of a study regarding the safety of autonomous vehicles relative to their meat-piloted counterparts. The headlines for the articles covering this varied widely and hilariously, ranging from autonomous vehicles only being able to drive in straight lines to AVs being safer than human-driven cars, full-stop. As always, one has to read past the headlines to get an idea of what’s really going on, or perhaps even brave reading the primary literature. From our reading of the abstract, it seems like the story is more nuanced. According to an analysis of crashes involving 35,000 human-driven vehicles and 2,100 vehicles with some level of automation, AVs with SAE Level 4 automation suffered fewer accidents across the board than those without any automation. Importantly, the accidents that Level 4 vehicles do suffer are more likely to occur when the vehicle is turning just before the accident, or during low-visibility conditions such as dawn or dusk. The study also compares Level 4 automation to Level 2, which has driver assistance features like lane-keeping and adaptive cruise control, and found that Level 2 actually beats Level 4 in clear driving conditions, but loses in rainy conditions and pretty much every other driving situation.

There’s a strange story coming out of New York regarding a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) enforcement action that seems a little shady. It regards a General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) repeater system used by the New York State GMRS Alliance. GMRS is sort of a “ham radio lite” system — there’s no testing required for a license, you just pay a fee — that uses the UHF band. Repeaters are allowed, but only under specific rules, and that appears to be where things have gone wrong for the club. The repeater system they used was a linked system, which connected geographically remote repeaters stretching from the far western part of the state near Buffalo all the way to Utica. It’s the linking that seems to have raised the FCC’s hackles, and understandably so because it seems to run counter to the GMRS rules in section 95. But it’s the method of notification that seems hinky here, as the repeater custodian was contacted by email. That’s not typical behavior for the FCC, who generally send enforcement notices by certified snail mail, or just dispense with the paper altogether and knock on your door. People seem to think this is all fake news, and it may well be, but then again, the email could just have been an informal heads-up preceding a formal notice. Either way, it’s bad news for the GMRS fans in upstate New York who used this system to keep in touch along Interstate 90, a long and lonely stretch of road that we know all too well.

Third time’s a charm? We’ll see when sunspot region AR3723 (née AR3697 née AR3664) makes a historic third pass around the Sun and potentially puts Earth in its crosshairs yet again. The region kicked up quite a ruckus on its first pass across the solar disk back in May with a series of X-class flares that produced stunning aurorae across almost all of North America. Pass number two saw the renamed region pass more or less quietly by, although it did launch an M-class flare on June 23 that caused radio blackouts in most of the North Atlantic basin. When AR3723 does peek out from behind the eastern limb of the Sun it’ll be a much-diminished version of its former Carrington-level glory, and will likely be given multiple designations thanks to fragmentation while it was hanging out on the backside. But it could still pack a punch, and even if this particular region doesn’t have much juice left, it sure seems like the Sun has plenty of surprises in store for the balance of Solar Cycle 25.

Somebody made a version of Conway’s Game of Life using nothing but checkboxes, which is very cool and you should check it out.

And finally, we’ve been doing an unexpected amount of automotive DIY repairs these days, meaning we spend a lot of time trolling around for parts. Here’s something we didn’t expect to see offered by a national retailer, but that we’d love to find a use for. If it ever comes back in stock we just might pick one up.

AnteayerSalida Principal

Coqui

Por: EasyWithAI
22 Diciembre 2022 at 01:42
Coqui is an AI text-to-speech tool that allows you to quickly create professional-quality voiceovers using a pre-made voices. You can also clone a voice to perfectly match your own tone and style. Coqui gives you control over the enunciation, emotion, pitch, and other aspects of your voice, making it even easier to bring your scripts […]

Source

Bark

Por: EasyWithAI
4 Septiembre 2023 at 12:30
Bark is an open-source text-to-audio generator that can create realistic sounding speech, music, and sound effects from text prompts. It supports multiple languages and can match different voices and accents. Bark is built using transformer models and generates audio directly from text, it can even generate different pronunciations and accents. There is also a Hugging […]

Source

FreeTTS

Por: EasyWithAI
9 Mayo 2023 at 12:23
FreeTTS is a powerful and versatile Text-to-Speech tool that offers developers an easy and efficient way to incorporate speech synthesis into their applications. Its open-source nature also ensures that it constantly evolves and improves, making it an excellent choice for those looking to add high-quality speech via text. The tool currently offers TTS voice from […]

Source

Speechify AI Studio

Por: EasyWithAI
10 Mayo 2024 at 13:36
Speechify’s AI Studio is a powerful suite of generative AI tools designed to create quality AI voice overs and videos. One of its most impressive features is the text-to-speech generator that can convert any text into natural-sounding speech across over 50 languages and accents. The voices sound incredibly human-like and can also be customized for […]

Source

Hackaday Links: May 26, 2024

26 Mayo 2024 at 23:00
Hackaday Links Column Banner

Another day, another crop of newly minted minimal astronauts, as Blue Origin’s New Shepard made a successful suborbital flight this week. Everything seemed to go according to plan, at least until right at the end, when an “unexpected foliage contingency” made astronaut egress a little more complicated than usual. The New Shepard capsule had the bad taste to touch down with a bit of West Texas shrubbery directly aligned with the hatch, making it difficult to find good footing for the platform used by the astronauts for the obligatory “smile and wave” upon exiting. The Blue Origin ground crew, clad in their stylish black and blue outfits that must be murderously impractical in the West Texas desert, stamped down the brush to place the stairway, but had a lot of trouble getting it to sit straight. Even with the impromptu landscaping, the terrain made it tough to get good footing without adding random bits of stuff to prop up one leg, an important task considering that one of the new astronauts was a 90-year-old man. It seems pretty short-sighted not to have adjustable legs on the stairway, but there it is.

Over the years, this space has recorded the closure of multiple brick-and-mortar surplus stores in a sort of slow-motion death spiral. While each one is a loss to the hobbyist community, this one hits close to home because it’s the only one we’ve actually visited in person. “You-Do-It Electronics Center” was a fixture of the Boston surplus scene for 75 years, a remnant of a time when dozens of major manufacturers made homes in the suburbs within the I-95/Route 128 loop — all roads in Massachusetts have at least two names. Digital Equipment Corp., Wang, Data General, and Polaroid, not to mention defense contractors like Raytheon and institutions like MIT and Lincoln Laboratories, all contributed to the abundance of electronic surplus, and a lot of it ended up on the shelves at You-Do-It’s enormous store. We remember spending an afternoon there and feeling a little like being at Disneyworld — there was way too much to see in just one day, and you could easily spend a lot of money. The announcement doesn’t state a reason for the closure, but we’ll guess that it’s just not possible for the owners to keep up with the decreasing demand for random bits and pieces of electronics. Farewell, You-Do-It, and thanks for the memories.

If you enjoy working on vehicles as much as we do, you’re sure to have run into a job that would have been a lot easier if you only had access to the original shop manuals for the car. We’ve been in that boat before and been sorely tempted to shell out whatever the manufacturer demands for a paper copy of the manual, price be damned. Or, there’s Operation CHARM, or Collection of High-quality Auto Repair Manuals, which is exactly what it sounds like — an online archive of scanned manuals for virtually every car or truck made between 1982 and 2013. We’ve checked out the Toyota offerings, and while navigation is a bit idiosyncratic, the scan quality is pretty good. What’s really nice is that you can download a zip file with all the good stuff for offline use. At least theoretically; the servers were overloaded every time we tried. It’s hard to say what the rights situation is with this material or how long it will be before a takedown request, so strike while the iron is hot.

Here’s another con to add to your schedule: Teardown 2024. Scheduled for the weekend on June 21 in Portland, Oregon, Teardown looks like it’ll be a pretty good time. The CFP link is still active, so it looks like they’re still accepting proposals.

And finally, it’s the silliest toolchain we’ve ever seen: Compilerfax. First, print a hard copy of your C code, then fax it to a special phone number using a phone shaped like a hamburger. A Raspberry Pi will decode the fax and do OCR on it, submit the code to GCC for compilation, and generate a report with the output, if any. The Pi then calls back the original fax number and prints the report. Sadly but wisely, this service isn’t publically accessible, as it lives only on the private phone system of the York Hackerspace in the UK. But if you’re going to EMFCamp next week, you just might be able to give it a whirl.

SpeechGen.io

Por: EasyWithAI
17 Mayo 2023 at 12:25
SpeechGen.io is an advanced, AI-powered Text-to-Speech converter that generates realistic voiceovers for any purpose. Simply input your text and create an engaging dialogue using a range of over 270 natural-sounding voices. The platform offers comprehensive voice customization options, including speed, pitch, stress, and more, all while supporting long text entries up to 2 million characters. […]

Source

iMyFone VoxBox

Por: EasyWithAI
24 Mayo 2023 at 12:48
iMyFone VoxBox is an advanced AI voice generator and voice cloning tool. It offers text-to-speech technology in over 46 languages and more than 3200 AI voices. Using VoxBox, you can easily generate realistic and expressive voiceovers for your content without the need for professional recording equipment or voice-over artists. It also provides voice cloning capabilities, […]

Source

Murf

Por: EasyWithAI
14 Diciembre 2022 at 23:43
Murf is a powerful AI text-to-speech generator and voice changer platform. The tool offers a wide range of AI voices with various accents and tones for creating AI-generated speech for various purposes such as videos, presentations, brand commercials, e-learning, YouTube videos, audiobooks, podcasts, IVR calls, and more. The platform uses advanced AI algorithms to accurately […]

Source

❌
❌