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The Supercon 2025 Badge is Built to be Customized


For anyone who’s joined us for previous years, you’ll know that badge hacking and modification are core to the Hackaday Supercon experience. While you’re of course free to leave the badge completely stock, we encourage attendees to tear it apart, learn how it works, and (hopefully) rebuild it into something unique. There are even prizes for the best hacks.

As such, every decision about the badge’s hardware and software is made with hackability in mind. It’s why we always try to add an expansion port to the badge and, in recent years, have leaned into MicroPython to make it easier for attendees to modify the code.

But one thing that’s been largely missing in previous badges is aesthetic customization. Sure, you could strip out the firmware and write something entirely new, or hang some oddball peripheral off the side of the thing, but ultimately it still looked like the badge we gave you at the door. That’s because, at the end of the day, the badges are just PCBs. Short of designing your own enclosure (which has certainly been done), every badge looks the same. That is, until now.

This year’s badge is unique among Supercon badges because it isn’t just a PCB. It’s actually a stack-up of two PCBs! That might not sound like much of a distinction, but in this case, the front board has no electrical function — its only purpose is to hold the keyboard membrane against the dome switches on the rear PCB. The only reason we made it out of a PCB in the first place is that it was convenient and cheap at the scale we needed. But if those weren’t concerns, it could just as easily have been 3D-printed or cut out with a laser or a CNC router.

While the necessities of running two hacker cons on opposite sides of the planet within a couple of months of each other meant we needed to think at scale, attendees are free to do whatever they want between now and when they get their badges on Friday. Want to carve a front panel out of aluminum on your CNC? Awesome. Perhaps laser-cut some thin plywood and give it a nice stain for that old-school look? We love it. Want to see what that fancy multi-material 3D printer you’ve got is capable of? So do we.
Hailing frequencies open, Captain.

Some Assembly Required


Want to make the 2025 Hackaday Supercon badge your own? Just head over to the “hardware/mechanicals_and_models” directory in the badge’s GitHub repository and you’ll find STEP, DXF, and SVG versions of the front panel. We’re eager to see some wild and wonderful front panels, but there are a few things to keep in mind:

  • Spacing between the rear and front boards should be approximately 2 mm.
  • The area around the keyboard should be roughly PCB thickness (~1.7 mm) for optimal typing.
  • You’ll need to provide hardware (M3 nuts/bolts work well) to attach the front panel to the badge.

If you’ve got other questions or need some assistance, leave a comment below or check in on the #badge-hacking channel in the Hackaday Discord server. See you at Supercon!


hackaday.com/2025/10/27/the-su…




israhelli killers stay unpunished


an article by Gideon Levy:
haaretz.com/israel-news/twilig…

see also:
mizanonline.ir/en/news/2933/on…

AI "abstract":

A 9-year-old Palestinian boy named Mohammad al-Hallaq was killed on October 16, 2025, in the village of al-Rihiya in the occupied West Bank, according to a report by Haaretz journalist Gideon Levy.
The incident occurred during an Israeli military raid when soldiers fired shots into the air, causing panic among children playing in a schoolyard. Mohammad, who stood still by a wall believing the situation was safe, was shot in the right thigh by an Israeli soldier; the bullet exited through his left side, destroying major blood vessels and internal organs.
He collapsed and died shortly after being rushed to the hospital, despite medical efforts to save him.
Eyewitnesses reported that the soldier who shot Mohammad raised his hands in celebration, with fellow soldiers joining in cheers, and that Israeli forces fired tear gas at local residents attempting to assist the child before leaving the scene.
The Israeli military stated that the incident was "clear" and that the Military Prosecutor’s Unit was reviewing it, but Haaretz reported that no formal investigation had been conducted.
The Israeli internal security service, Shin Bet, reportedly warned the family against holding demonstrations during the funeral.
Gideon Levy, who reported on the case, questioned the lack of accountability and highlighted the broader pattern of violence against Palestinian children in the occupied West Bank.
The article also references a separate incident in February 2025 where Palestinian detainees released from Israeli prisons were forced to wear white T-shirts with a blue Star of David and the message "we will not forget nor forgive," which Levy criticized as a form of forced political messaging.

reshared this



Dividiamodi una pizza....


La mia opinione su splittypie

Hai organicato un viaggio con degli amici, ecco lo strumento giusto:
NESSUNA ISCRIZIONE;
Funziona ovunque Accessibile su qualsiasi dispositivo con un browser web
Per condividere basta passare un link a un amico, il gioco è fatto.

🌖 per me è uno strumento indispensabile per molte occasioni.

Si esiste anche spliit, graficamente più accattivante, ma l'ho trovato un po' più complicato, splittypie è semplice e veloce.



The general who advised Netflix’s nuclear Armageddon movie doesn’t believe in abolishing nuclear weapons.#News #nuclear


'House of Dynamite' Is About the Zoom Call that Ends the World


This post contains spoilers for the Netflix film ‘House of Dynamite.’

Netflix’s new Kathryn Bigelow-directed nuclear war thriller wants audiences to ask themselves the question: what would you do if you had 15 minutes to decide whether or not to end the world?

House of Dynamite is about a nuclear missile hitting the United States as viewed from the conference call where America’s power players gather to decide how to retaliate. The decision window is short, just 15 minutes. In the film that’s all the time the President has to assess the threat, pick targets, and decide if the US should also launch its nuclear weapons. It’s about how much time they’d have in real life too.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
In House of Dynamite, America’s early warning systems detect the launch of a nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. The final target is Chicago and when it lands more than 20 million people will die in a flash. Facing the destruction of a major American city, the President must decide what—if any—action to take in response.

The US has hundreds of nuclear missiles ready to go and plans to strike targets across Russia, China, and North Korea. But there’s a catch. In the film, America didn’t see who fired the nuke and no one is taking credit. It’s impossible to know who to strike and in what proportion. What’s a president to do?

House of Dynamite tells the story of this 15 minute Zoom call—from detection of the launch to its terminal arrival in Chicago—three different times. There’s dozens of folks on the call, from deputy advisors to the Secretary of Defense to the President himself, and each run through of the events gives the audience a bigger peak at how the whole machine operates, culminating, in the end, with the President’s view.

Many of the most effective and frightening films about nukes—Threads and The Day After—focus on the lives of the humans living in the blast zone. They’re about the crumbling of society in a wasteland, beholden to the decisions of absent political powers so distant that they often never appear on screen. House of Dynamite is about those powerful people caught in the absurd game of nuclear war, forced to make decisions with limited information and enormous consequences.

In both the movie and real life, America has ground-based interceptors stationed in California and Alaska that are meant to knock a nuke out of the sky should one ever get close. The early film follows missileers in Alaska as they launch the interceptor only to have it fail. It’s a horrifying and very real possibility. The truth of interceptors is that we don’t have many of them, the window to hit a fast moving ICBM is narrow, and in tests they only work about half the time.

“So it’s a fucking coin toss? That’s what $50 billion buys us?” Secretary of Defense Reid Baker, played by Jarred Harris, says in the film. This detail caught the eye of the Trump White House, which plans to spend around $200 billion on a space based version of the same tech.

Bloomberg reported on an internal Pentagon memo that directed officials to debunk House of Dynamite’s claims about missile defense. The Missile Defense Agency told Bloomberg that interceptors “have displayed a 100% accuracy rate in testing for more than a decade.” The Pentagon separately told Bloomberg that it wasn’t consulted on the film at all.

Director Bigelow worked closely with the CIA to make Zero Dark Thirty, but has tussled with the Pentagon before. The DoD didn’t like The Hurt Locker and pulled out of the project after showing some initial support. Bigelow has said in interviews that she wanted House of Dynamite to be an independent project.

Despite that independence, House of Dynamite nails the details of nuclear war in 2025. The acronyms, equipment, and procedures are all frighteningly close to reality and Bigelow did have help on set from retired US Army lieutenant general and former US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) Chief of Staff Dan Karbler.

Karbler is a career missile guy and as the chief of staff of STRATCOM he oversaw America’s nuclear weapons. He told 404 Media that he landed the gig by scaring the hell out of Bigelow and her staff on, appropriately, a Zoom call.

Bigelow wanted to meet Karbler and they set up a big conference call on Zoom. He joined the call but kept his camera off. As people filtered in, Karbler listened and waited. “Here’s how it kind of went down,” Karbler told 404 Media. “There’s a little break in the conversation so I click on my microphone, still leaving the camera off, and I just said: ‘This is the DDO [deputy director of operations] convening a National Event Conference. Classification of this conference TOP SECRET. TK [Talent Keyhole] SI: US STRATCOM, US INDOPACOM, US Northern Command, SecDef Cables, military system to the secretary.”

“SecDef Cables, please bring the secretary of defense in the conference. Mr. Secretary, this is the DDO. Because of the time constraints of this missile attack, recommend we transition immediately from a national event conference to a nuclear decision conference, and we bring the President into the conference. PEOC [Presidential Emergency Operations Center], please bring the President into the conference.”

“And I stopped there and I clicked on my camera and I said, ‘ladies and gentleman, that’s how the worst day in American history will begin. I hope your script does it some justice,’” Karbler said. The theatrics worked and, according to Karbler, he sat next to Bigelow every day on set and helped shape the movie.

House of Dynamite begins and ends with ambiguity. We never learn who fired the nuclear weapon at Chicago. The last few minutes of the film focus on the President looking through retaliation plans. He’s in a helicopter, moments from the nuke hitting Chicago, and looking through plans that would condemn millions of people on the planet to fast and slow deaths. The film ends as he wallows in this decision, we never learn what he chooses.

Karbler said it was intentional. “The ending was ambiguous so the audience would leave with questions,” he said. “The easy out would have been: ‘Well, let’s just have a nuclear detonation over Chicago.’ That’s the easy out. Leaving it like it is, you risk pissing off the audience, frankly, because they want a resolution of some sort, but they don’t get that resolution. So instead they’re going to have to be able to have a discussion.”

In my house, at least, the gambit worked. During the credits my wife and I talked about whether or not we’d launch the nukes ourselves (We’d both hold off) and I explained the unpleasant realities of ground based interceptors.

Karbler, too, said he wouldn’t have launched the nukes. It’s just one nuke, after all. It’s millions of people, sure, but if America launches its nukes in retaliation then there’s a good chance Russia, China, and everyone else might do the same. “Because of the potential of a response provoking a much, much broader response, and something that would not be proportional,” Karbler said. “Don’t get me wrong, 20 million people, an entire city, a nuclear attack that hit us, but if we respond back, then you’re going to get into im-proportionality calculus.”

Despite the horrors present on screen in House of Dynamite, Karbler isn’t a nuclear abolitionist. “The genie is out of the bottle, you’re not going to put it back in there,” he said. “So what do we do to ensure our best defense? It seems counterintuitive, you know, the best defense is gonna be a good offense. You’ve gotta be able to have a response back against the adversary.”

Basically, Karbler says we should do what we’re doing now: build a bunch more nukes and make sure your enemies know you’re willing to use them. “Classic deterrence has three parts: impose unacceptable costs on the adversary. Deny the adversary any benefit of attack, read that as our ability to defend ourselves, missile defense, but also have the credible messaging behind it,” he said.

These are weapons that have the power to end the world, weapons we make and pray we never use. But we do keep making them. Almost all the old nuclear treaties between Russia and America are gone. The US is spending trillions to replace old ICBM silos and make new nuclear weapons. After decades of maintaining a relatively small nuclear force, China is building up its own stockpiles.

Trump has promised a Golden Dome to keep America safe from nukes and on Sunday Putin claimed Russia had successfully tested a brand new nuclear-powered cruise missile. The people who track existential threats believe we’re closer to nukes ending the world than at any other time in history.




‏Rapporto Umanitario sulla Situazione nella Striscia di Gaza

‏Le organizzazioni internazionali e delle Nazioni Unite confermano che gli aiuti umanitari che entrano nella Striscia di Gaza sono del tutto insufficienti a soddisfare i bisogni fondamentali della popolazione, in un contesto di grave deterioramento delle condizioni di vita e sanitarie.

‏Nonostante le affermazioni israeliane secondo cui gli aiuti entrerebbero regolarmente e che le notizie sulla fame siano esagerate, i rapporti sul campo e le dichiarazioni dell’ONU, dell’UNICEF e di altre organizzazioni umanitarie dimostrano il contrario.

‏L’UNICEF segnala che la situazione a Gaza è estremamente drammatica: centinaia di camion di aiuti restano in attesa ai valichi, e quelli che riescono ad entrare sono pochi e non bastano a coprire i bisogni essenziali. Il sistema sanitario è al collasso, con ospedali distrutti e una grave carenza di medicinali e attrezzature.

‏Circa 650.000 studenti non possono tornare a scuola a causa della distruzione della maggior parte degli edifici scolastici e universitari, con la conseguente interruzione totale del processo educativo.

‏Secondo gli accordi umanitari firmati a Sharm El-Sheikh, sotto la mediazione dell’ex presidente americano Donald Trump e con la partecipazione di Egitto, Qatar, Turchia e altri paesi, è previsto l’ingresso urgente e regolare degli aiuti, ma la loro applicazione rimane molto limitata.

‏La Striscia di Gaza ha oggi bisogno di oltre 300.000 tende per ospitare le famiglie sfollate e di almeno 600 camion di aiuti al giorno carichi di farina, acqua e beni alimentari di prima necessità per combattere la fame.

‏In questo contesto, l’Associazione di Solidarietà con il Popolo Palestinese in Italia continua i suoi progetti umanitari per fornire cibo, acqua e pane agli sfollati, soprattutto con l’arrivo dell’inverno e il peggioramento delle condizioni di vita.

‏Facciamo quindi appello a tutte le persone di buona volontà a contribuire e sostenere i progetti umanitari per alleviare le sofferenze del popolo palestinese a Gaza.

26 ottobre 2025

Associazione dei Palestinesi in Italia (API)



A 3D Printed 16mm Movie Camera


The basic principles of a motion picture film camera should be well understood by most readers — after all, it’s been well over a hundred years since the Lumière brothers wowed 19th century Paris with their first films. But making one yourself is another matter entirely, as they are surprisingly complex and high-precision devices. This hasn’t stopped [Henry Kidman] from giving it a go though, and what makes his camera more remarkable is that it’s 3D printed.

The problem facing a 16mm movie camera designer lies in precisely advancing the film by one frame at the correct rate while filming, something done in the past with a small metal claw that grabs each successive sprocket. His design eschews that for a sprocket driven by a stepper motor from an Arduino. His rotary shutter is driven by another stepper motor, and he has the basis of a good camera.

The tests show promise, but he encounters a stability problem, because as it turns out, it’s difficult to print a 16mm sprocket in plastic without it warping. He solves this by aligning frames in post-processing. After fixing a range of small problems though, he has a camera that delivers a very good picture quality, and that makes us envious.

Sadly, those of us who ply our film-hacking craft in 8mm don’t have the luxury of enough space for a sprocket to replace the claw.

youtube.com/embed/ZAtYJYfV2nA?…


hackaday.com/2025/10/27/a-3d-p…




Gaetano Martino liberale europeo

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

25 novembre 2025, ore 18:00 – Fondazione Luigi Einaudi, Via della conciliazione,10 – Roma Interverranno Emma Galli, Direttrice comitato scientifico della fondazione luigi einaudi Renata Gravina, Ricercatrice fondazione luigi einaudi
L'articolo Gaetano Martino liberale fondazioneluigieinaudi.it/gaet…



Gaetano Martino un messinese Presidente del Parlamento Europeo

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

31 Ottobre 2025, ore 11:00 – Villa Piccolo, Capo D’orlando (Me) Interverranno Giuseppe Benedetto, Presidente Fondazione Luigi Einaudi Andrea Pruiti Ciarello, Presidente Della Fondazione Famiglia Piccolo Di Calanovella
L'articolo Gaetano Martino un messinese Presidente del



Starmer da Erdoğan, verso l’accordo sugli Eurofighter per la Turchia

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Durante la visita ufficiale ad Ankara, il premier britannico Keir Starmer e il presidente turco Recep Tayyip Erdoğan hanno discusso in modo avanzato della vendita di circa quaranta caccia Eurofighter Typhoon alla Turchia. Nel corso dell’incontro il dossier ha guadagnato velocità e




La Facoltà di Teologia della Pontificia Università Gregoriana – in collaborazione con il Centro internazionale degli Amici di Newman, il “De Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture” (University of Notre Dame) e il National Institute of Newman Studies – …



“Oggi siamo diventati esperti di dettagli infinitesimali di realtà, ma siamo incapaci di avere di nuovo una visione d’insieme, una visione che tenga insieme le cose attraverso un significato più grande e più profondo”.