Hackaday Podcast

Ep 355: Person Detectors, Walkie Talkies, Open Smartphones, and a WiFi Traffic Light

Jan 30, 2026
They dig into a Wi‑Fi trick that detects people moving through a signal field. An open‑source smartphone design and its tradeoffs get a spirited review. DIY comms for cyclists and tiny voice recognition on low‑power MCUs are showcased. Creative hardware hacks include 3D‑printed PCBs, plaster smoothing tricks, a tensegrity bicycle wheel, and an art piece that visualizes Wi‑Fi traffic.
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INSIGHT

Practical Openness Has Limits

  • Some subsystems (LTE modems, Pi blobs) remain closed even in open projects.
  • Practical openness sometimes means integrating documented black boxes rather than fully inspecting them.
ANECDOTE

Cycling Walkie‑Talkies With Local Voice VAD

  • CoreBB built polished ESP‑Now walkie‑talkies for cyclists with voice activity detection.
  • The device runs VADnet locally, shows commands on an OLED, and supports small‑vocabulary voice actions like 'turn left'.
ADVICE

Prefer Local Tiny Keyword Models

  • Use tiny, pretrained local keyword recognizers for low‑power offline controls.
  • Favor small vocabularies to avoid cloud latency and preserve battery life on embedded devices.
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