![]() has added a new project titled Dungeons And Devil Fruits.has updated the project titled Dungeons & Devil Fruits.Adrian Prinz has updated details to 6-Axis Robot from Scratch - Servo driven.spaceminions on Stay Online When The Power Goes Out With This Fiber Modem UPS Hack.WereCatf on Stay Online When The Power Goes Out With This Fiber Modem UPS Hack.Daid on ACK1 Makes Getting To Know The ATtiny1616 Easy.Rog77 on Polish Railways Fall Victim To Cheap Radio Attack.Daniel Glasser on Retro Gadgets: The 1974 Breadboard Project.abjq on Polish Railways Fall Victim To Cheap Radio Attack.Chris on Converting Wind To Electricity Or: The Doubly-Fed Induction Generator.Hackaday Podcast 233: Chandrayaan On The Moon, Cyberdecks, Hackerspaces Born At A German Computer Camp 5 Comments I really don’t like using my phone for anything when I am behind the wheel. It would drive me bat shit crazy to navigate a menu each time I wanted to adjust the volume.Īnd in my state if they catch you playing with your phone while you are driving, it is up to a $500 fine. I keep it turned down until I get to where I actually need it and than turn it up. ![]() Yup, it has a knob, I live in a rural area and it has no idea of the back roads or the fastest ways to get to any of the main roads. I wish it had some features the new ones have, but it has one really big one the new ones lack, a physical volume control. It sucks having to navigate through menus.change the radio station or turn the heat down a bit. Call me old fashioned but give me knobs and buttons any day of the week. You had to navigate through tiers of menus to do anything and when you did get to what you wanted to do, the interface was awful. I drove a friends car that had a touch screen and perhaps if you have driven it for years you might like it but for me it was awful. Posted in Android Hacks, Raspberry Pi Tagged android auto, raspberry pi, touchscreen Post navigation If you have a double DIN opening already, it might not be very difficult. ![]() Perhaps you’ll do a little dashboard surgery. Not to mention with the Pi under there and all the source code, this should be highly hackable. A 3D-printed Pi case and some kind of mount for the LCD and you can ditch the 8-track. If you have a spare Pi and a screen hanging around, this is a handy project. The only limitation we can see stems from the lack of audio input on the Raspberry Pi, though we wonder if a USB sound card would take care of that problem. However, if you prefer, you can build it all yourself from GitHub. The advantage to Crankshaft is it is a plug-and-play distribution. The open source project is based on OpenAuto which, in turn, leverages aasdk. Just pick up a Raspberry Pi 3 and a seven-inch touchscreen, and use Crankshaft to turn it into an Android Auto setup. But what if your car still has an 8-track? No problem. Modern cars and head units are pretty fancy gadget-wise. ![]()
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