Time Station Emulator
Posted by FriedPickles 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by cvoss 1 day ago
Comment by NegativeK 1 day ago
Comment by xattt 1 day ago
Comment by direwolf20 1 day ago
That's a serial port, except when you're playing Bad Apple
Comment by anfractuosity 1 day ago
Comment by axus 1 day ago
Comment by mikestew 1 day ago
Sometimes I think I’m a smart guy…and then I read of people doing shit like this.
Comment by fragmede 1 day ago
Comment by ihaveajob 1 day ago
Comment by hackernudes 1 day ago
Comment by torcete 1 day ago
Comment by hahahahhaah 1 day ago
Comment by gchadwick 1 day ago
This is a truly fantastic piece of hacking, going by the original meaning of the word as used within the dawn of the computer era.
Comment by qingcharles 16 hours ago
Comment by jofzar 1 day ago
It's like a couple of years ago where someone showed a proof of concept of turning a HDD into a microphone
Comment by jasonjayr 1 day ago
Comment by xattt 1 day ago
Comment by jhbadger 1 day ago
Comment by lxgr 1 day ago
That said, newer ones can use authentication, which (together with a reasonably accurate local oscillator) can prevent at least trivial spoofing.
Comment by WorldMaker 23 hours ago
Comment by Chaosvex 1 day ago
Comment by airbreather 1 day ago
"This video explores LoRaWAN communication using a microcontroller without a dedicated radio chip. CNLohr demonstrates techniques to transmit LoRa packets over surprisingly long distances, pushing the limits of inexpensive hardware. The project involves creative software and hardware interaction to generate signals at unexpected frequencies."
Comment by SamBam 1 day ago
Regardless, I'm excited to try this out next time I'm in the classroom. I'm a little confused by time zones, however. My clock has no controls on the back whatsoever (at least that I can find, I haven't opened it up), so I assume it doesn't know what time zone I'm in.
So do I need to set the time zone on the station emulator? There's an "offset" setting, but it says it's only for correcting "minor errors."
Comment by LeoPanthera 1 day ago
Comment by SamBam 1 day ago
Comment by LeoPanthera 1 day ago
Comment by ricktdotorg 1 day ago
Comment by pesfandiar 1 day ago
Comment by com2kid 1 day ago
Which it did. The very first time it was plugged in, and then never again after. The clock also kept horrible time, it lost a couple minutes every month. Truly an astonishing piece of wtf engineering.
Comment by kotaKat 1 day ago
Comment by lxgr 1 day ago
While the mains frequency is usually a great (long-term) stable frequency source, the bigger problem is that all microwaves I know lack a backup battery and require re-setting after unplugging them.
Comment by sumtechguy 1 day ago
You have to specifically look for the feature. Most do not have it.
Comment by scoops_ 1 day ago
Comment by wrs 1 day ago
Comment by geerlingguy 1 day ago
I'll have to test this out sometime, what a fun idea!
Comment by McGlockenshire 1 day ago
I find the WWV/WWVB droning soothing somehow.
Comment by labcomputer 1 day ago
Comment by xattt 1 day ago
I thought this was Boulder, but I assume not?
Comment by lxgr 1 day ago
Comment by vermilingua 1 day ago
Comment by McGlockenshire 1 day ago
I got my WWVB and WWVH confused!
There's a reasonable emulator here: https://wwv.mcodes.org/
Unfortunately it doesn't let you play both at the same time, which is what you need for the full experience.
Comment by lxgr 1 day ago
Comment by WarOnPrivacy 1 day ago
Me too. I had a Hallicrafter S-38 as a kid and used fall asleep by WWV & CHU. It felt like a private space that only nerds could find.
Comment by drmpeg 1 day ago
Comment by tamimio 1 day ago
Nonetheless, pretty amazing!
Comment by tamimio 14 hours ago
Comment by hahahahhaah 1 day ago
Comment by sublinear 1 day ago
I just tried it on a clock that has only ever successfully synced once many years ago, and it's still in the same bad location that never seemed to get a strong enough signal.
Its crappy little LCD animation did indeed seem to dance in sync with when I would turn the signal on and off on my phone. It took a few minutes of trying but then suddenly the hour and seconds updated to the exact time. Had to set the minutes manually :/
Comment by wildzzz 1 day ago
WWVB clocks are great but aren't so good these days. NTP is pretty much as good as anyone will ever need in their home but this has the downside of usually requiring internet access. GPS clocks have been the standard for 30+ years for anyone needing precision timing.
Comment by cantalopes 1 day ago
Comment by kiwijamo 1 day ago
Comment by pimlottc 1 day ago
Comment by brilliang 1 day ago
Then someone will respond: you’re just catatrophising- anyone could’ve done this years before now, and I’ll say no, because it wasn’t up on frontpage HN there with code so that anyone would think of it. Then they’ll say, well why did you tell everyone that idea then! It’s your fault! Then I’ll say that someone would’ve done it if it weren’t me. Then I’ll go have a beer.
Comment by bityard 1 day ago