![]() I’d love to do a “badges I somehow missed at DEF CON” post! If you had a hardware badge at DEF CON that didn’t make it into this roundup, please email me (mike at the most obvious domain). If you enjoyed reading about them, please help me out by sharing this post around so that others can enjoy it as well. I spent a lot of time trying to track down details of these badges. He was also wearing an NSL Cylon v2 which is a kit for surface mount soldering practice. It shows time using GPS sync keep it accurate and includes temperature, compass, and some ancillary functions. It features a color screen OLED screen and the Propeller driven wearable hangs out on a leather wristband. Above you can see two that was wearing at the con. There were a ton of miscellaneous hardware offerings and admittedly I didn’t get pictures of very many of them. Keep reading for ten more great badges seen over the weekend. The matte black solder mask looks fantastic, and he took great care in use of font, size, alignment, and things like letting copper show through for a really stunning piece of hardware art. The piezo element also chirps many different sounds based on the interactions with different badges. When the two are in the same area the 2015 badges will scroll the nickname of the 2014 badge it “sees”. This badge is slave to commands from last year’s badge. There is a spinner around one eye, and pads for select and back. The user controls are all capacitive touch. ![]() Two AA batteries power the board which has a surface-mount LED matrix. The eyes are RGB pixels which are each on their own PCB that is soldered onto the back of the badge, with openings for the LED to show through. It uses a PSOC4 chip to control a ton of LEDs. This is a great update from the badge he designed last year, keeping the skull and bones outline. Did a great job with his badge design this year for the Whiskey Pirate Crew. ![]()
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