Converting CTs and MRIs Into Printable Objects
People get CT and MRI scans every day, and when [Oliver] needed some medical diagnostic imaging done, he was sure to ask for the files so he could turn his skull into a printable 3D object. [Oliver] is...
View ArticleHackaday Prize Entry: A $100 CT Scanner
What do you do when you’re dad’s a veterinarian, dumped an old x-ray machine in your garage, and you’re looking for an entry for The Hackaday Prize? Build a CT scanner, of course. At least that’s...
View ArticleNon-Invasive Smart Electricity Meter
There are a lot of ways to measure energy usage in the home, but most of them involve handling mains voltage. Not only that, but sometimes they require handling mains voltage before it gets through a...
View ArticleFirst Edition of German Computer Mag is a Blast from the Past
Every once in a while we get nostalgic for the old days of computing. Here, we’re getting nostalgic for a past that wasn’t even our own, but will probably bring a smile to all the German hackers out...
View ArticleHackaday Links: February 2, 2020
Is it just me or did January seem to last for about three months this year? A lot has happened since the turn of the decade 31 days ago, both in the normie world and in our space. But one of the...
View ArticleCT Scans Help Reverse Engineer Mystery Module
The degree to which computed tomography has been a boon to medical science is hard to overstate. CT scans give doctors a look inside the body that gives far more information about the spatial...
View ArticleLooking Inside a 3D Printer Nozzle with Computed Tomography
Have you ever wondered what’s actually going on inside the hotend of your 3D printer? It doesn’t seem like much of a mystery — the filament gets melty, it gets squeezed out by the pressure of the...
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