xtools

joined 1 year ago
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[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

i was expecting a discussion about weed grinders and was looking forward to it ๐Ÿ˜ณ

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 8 points 1 week ago

advertisers can gargle my ballsack

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago

or eastern Europe in winter

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

yeah my college has been infamous for that. our laws require universities to admit everyone who meets the formal requirements, and they've had 3x the students they could handle. so they "examed out" 2/3 of the people to get rid of them. economics, accounting and maths have been ridiculously difficult

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 12 points 1 week ago (2 children)

college too. i can't remember most of the specifics I've learned, but I could jump back into any topic and get "fluent" quickly again

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 9 points 1 week ago (1 children)

"Stanley stepped out of his office"

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

if you're already using GOS, just use vanadium then, and block ads on the dns-level (eg by setting nextdns or adguard as "private dns" on your phone). works fine for me!

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 4 points 1 week ago

i was thinking of it more in the way of how ARM came to be. they took RISC, built upon and extended it, with the end result being proprietary processors which weren't RISC anymore.

i strongly doubt that anything qualcomm will create would contribute to the risc-v ecosystem at a whole. on the other hand, maybe it's an important step for it's mass adoption. time will tell

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 5 points 1 week ago (2 children)

as much as i love seeing a company embracing risc-v... why did it have to be qualcomm? they'll just turn it into their own proprietary crap just so they can save money on the arm licenses

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

i'm pretty happy with nextdns, you can set all kinds of filter lists, and you can disable all logs. and it's free to use up to a certain monthly threshold which i didn't hit before

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 4 points 2 weeks ago

ps2-ps3 is my go-to era too. i go back to my RGH'd xbox360 equipped with an external 1tb hdd more often than the ps4 or steam

[โ€“] xtools@programming.dev 7 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

me blocking the community since i can actually read it

 

a nice side effect from creating my project website though is that it includes a setup wizard, so you'll finally be able to actually do something with your Colibri wallet ๐Ÿ˜… plus I've wrapped up the code I've used into a TS/React SDK that can be reused for the MyEtherWallet fork! just need some more time and energy, but soon โ„ข๏ธ

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/24922639

Any of these low-cost ESP32 development boards (ranging from ~$3 to ~$15) can be turned into a fully functional crypto hardware wallet with colibri.diy - ofc fully free and open source

The project is still in the pre-release stage, but if you like tinkering with Arduino & hardware, check out the github repository for the firmware and build instructions.

Please let me know what you think!

 

Any of these low-cost ESP32 development boards (ranging from ~$3 to ~$15 on Aliexpress) can be turned into a fully functional and secure crypto hardware wallet with colibri.diy - ofc fully free and open source

The project is still in the pre-release stage, but if you like tinkering with Arduino & hardware, check out the github repository for the firmware and build instructions.

Please let me know what you think!

7
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by xtools@programming.dev to c/colibri@programming.dev
 

Just packaged up version 0.0.4 of Colibri.diy!

While there haven't been too many major changes, I've added base address derivation for Solana and Polkadot/Substrate chains, and added DASH, DGB and ZEC support in the "Bitcoin-like" category.

In the background, I've also

  • prepared a Nextra.js skeleton for the companion webapp
  • planned the site's structure, functionality and content
  • sketched out the complete GUI design for the display integration in v0.1.x

The next release will be focused around the companion webapp, so that you can actually set up your wallet without having to resort to BLE debugging tools to do so.

After that's out of the way, I'll be integrating everything into a MyEtherWallet fork, so it finally starts to feel like a real hardware wallet :)

Any feedback appreciated!

 

Just released v0.0.3 of colibri.diy - new features include Ethereum transaction signing and basic Bitcoin support <3

Now working on a companion webapp to ease device setup, and the first 3rd-party wallet integration. Please let me know what you think!

 

the colibri.diy-project is still under development, please give it a star on Github <3

 

just released the firmware three days ago, head over to colibri.diy to find build instructions and more info or read the intro post

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/22952335

Hi Lemmy,

I'm Martin and have been working on a free and open-source, fully DIY crypto hardware wallet for a couple of months now. I' ve just published the first functional preview of the firmware, which can be built by anyone easily using Arduino IDE, and flashed to a variety of $5-off-the-shelve ESP32 boards from Aliexpress.

The first release will allow for storing up to 30 encrypted seed phrases, and Ethereum signing via Bluetooth Low Energy. Under the hood, it's powered by the cryptographic libraries written and used by Trezor.io.

Support for more interfaces and chains can be added fairly easily due to a modular structure, and there is a whole roadmap planned to extend functionality (starting with support for displays).

If you're interested to learn more, check out the README in the Colibri repository.

Please let me know what you think, and leave a ๐ŸŒŸ on Github if you like the project.

Also if there's anything that you've always missed in or been annoyed by a hardware wallet, your input would be greatly appreciated!

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/22952335

Hi Lemmy,

I'm Martin and have been working on a free and open-source, fully DIY crypto hardware wallet for a couple of months now. I' ve just published the first functional preview of the firmware, which can be built by anyone easily using Arduino IDE, and flashed to a variety of $5-off-the-shelve ESP32 boards from Aliexpress.

The first release will allow for storing up to 30 encrypted seed phrases, and Ethereum signing via Bluetooth Low Energy. Under the hood, it's powered by the cryptographic libraries written and used by Trezor.io.

Support for more interfaces and chains can be added fairly easily due to a modular structure, and there is a whole roadmap planned to extend functionality (starting with support for displays).

If you're interested to learn more, check out the README in the Colibri repository.

Please let me know what you think, and leave a ๐ŸŒŸ on Github if you like the project.

Also if there's anything that you've always missed in or been annoyed by a hardware wallet, your input would be greatly appreciated!

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/22952335

Hi Lemmy,

I'm Martin and have been working on a free and open-source, fully DIY crypto hardware wallet for a couple of months now. I' ve just published the first functional preview of the firmware, which can be built by anyone easily using Arduino IDE, and flashed to a variety of $5-off-the-shelve ESP32 boards from Aliexpress.

The first release will allow for storing up to 30 encrypted seed phrases, and Ethereum signing via Bluetooth Low Energy. Under the hood, it's powered by the cryptographic libraries written and used by Trezor.io.

Support for more interfaces and chains can be added fairly easily due to a modular structure, and there is a whole roadmap planned to extend functionality (starting with support for displays).

If you're interested to learn more, check out the README in the Colibri repository.

Please let me know what you think, and leave a ๐ŸŒŸ on Github if you like the project.

Also if there's anything that you've always missed in or been annoyed by a hardware wallet, your input would be greatly appreciated!

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/22952335

Hi Lemmy,

I'm Martin and have been working on a free and open-source, fully DIY crypto hardware wallet for a couple of months now. I' ve just published the first functional preview of the firmware, which can be built by anyone easily using Arduino IDE, and flashed to a variety of $5-off-the-shelve ESP32 boards from Aliexpress.

The first release will allow for storing up to 30 encrypted seed phrases, and Ethereum signing via Bluetooth Low Energy. Under the hood, it's powered by the cryptographic libraries written and used by Trezor.io.

Support for more interfaces and chains can be added fairly easily due to a modular structure, and there is a whole roadmap planned to extend functionality (starting with support for displays).

If you're interested to learn more, check out the README in the Colibri repository.

Please let me know what you think, and leave a ๐ŸŒŸ on Github if you like the project.

Also if there's anything that you've always missed in or been annoyed by a hardware wallet, your input would be greatly appreciated!

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by xtools@programming.dev to c/crypto@lemmy.ml
 

Hi Lemmy,

I'm Martin and have been working on a free and open-source, fully DIY crypto hardware wallet for a couple of months now. I' ve just published the first functional preview of the firmware, which can be built by anyone easily using Arduino IDE, and flashed to a variety of $5-off-the-shelve ESP32 boards from Aliexpress.

The first release will allow for storing up to 30 encrypted seed phrases, and Ethereum signing via Bluetooth Low Energy. Under the hood, it's powered by the cryptographic libraries written and used by Trezor.io.

Support for more interfaces and chains can be added fairly easily due to a modular structure, and there is a whole roadmap planned to extend functionality (starting with support for displays).

If you're interested to learn more, check out the README in the Colibri repository.

Please let me know what you think, and leave a ๐ŸŒŸ on Github if you like the project.

Also if there's anything that you've always missed in or been annoyed by a hardware wallet, your input would be greatly appreciated!

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