Speakers include world renowned leaders from industry, academia, the arts and maker community. Talks cover a wide range of subjects from electronics, mechanics to related fields such as digital fabrication, fashion technology, self-quantification devices, and IP law. As a microcosm of the Open Source Hardware community, the Summit provides an annual friendly forum for the community.
Teardown, an awesome event for hacking, discovering, and sharing hardware, returns to Portland this June.
When?
Friday 21st June to Sunday 23rd June 2024
Where?
Beautiful Portland, Oregon at Lloyd Center Mall
What?
Talks, workshops, installations, demos and space to hack – check out last year’s line up
Who?
Anyone interested in hardware: engineers, designers, artists, educators or enthusiasts
Teardown is about the practice and the art of hardware: prototyping, manufacturing, hacking, testing, creating, disassembling, experimenting, and circumventing, all while having fun. Leave the marketing glitz and talk of venture capital at the door and come prepared learn, teach, and be inspired.
Subsidized tickets for low-income attendees are available. If you would like to attend and feel you qualify, please email [email protected] for more information.
Free tickets are available for a limited number of volunteers who work at least two 4-hour shifts. Please email [email protected] if you would like to volunteer, including any schedule constraints.
A limited number of free tickets are also available for members of hackerspaces or makerspaces who want to come and represent their communities. Please email [email protected] with details about your space.
A limited number of full-price tickets will be available for sale at the door. Payment must be via credit card: cash is not accepted.
Have an idea for a talk, workshop, demo, or installation? We’re looking for a broad range of topics, participants, skill levels, and formats. Submit your Teardown proposal! Accepted proposals get free ticket(s).
Travis Smith’s open source cartridge design for the Commodore 64 and 128 includes ROM loading, MIDI in and out, and Ethernet connectivity. Gareth Halfacree writes on Hackster:
At its simplest, the TeensyROM can work as a way to load cartridge ROM images into a real Commodore 64 or compatible, loaded from the Teensy’s own flash storage or from a microSD Card or USB storage device. It can also load program files directly, and at a considerably faster speed than official Commodore storage devices like the 1541 floppy drive or Datasette cassette tape deck.
That’s only part of the TeensyROM’s feature-set, though. The device can also serve as a MIDI input or output, allowing you to make use of the Commodore 64’s famous MOS Technology 6581 Sound Interface Device (SID) chip from a USB MIDI keyboard — or to drive an external MIDI device from the Commodore 64 itself. It’s also possible to stream MIDI- or SID-format files from a modern PC and hear them played on the original hardware. Finally, the gadget also offers internet connectivity over an Ethernet port — emulating a Swiftlink cartridge with 38.4kbps modem attached.
The TeensyROM has been published to GitHub under the permissive MIT license with full source code, hardware design files, and a 3D-printable case, with Smith saying it was designed for those “medium skilled” at soldering; he is also selling fully-assembled units on his Tindie store for $59.
$20 per square inch, which includes three copies of your design.
For example, a 2 square inch board would cost $40 and you’d get three copies of your board. You can order as many copies as you want, as long as they’re in multiples of three.
Turn Times
Orders will ship within 5-6 business days of ordering.
You can get a quote, approve a design, and pay for an order at OSH Park.
Need more than 100 square inches of boards? Our 4 Layer Medium Run Service is a less expensive option for larger orders.