Get Your YouTube Summary:
- Copy the video link.
- Paste it into the input field.
- Click 'Summarize' to get your summary with timestamps.
Important Note on Subtitles:
- Automatic summary generation requires English subtitles on the video.
- If the video has no English subtitles, the automatic download of the transcript using the link will fail.
- Manual Alternative: You can still get a summary!
- Find the transcript on YouTube (usually below the video description when viewed on a desktop browser).
- Copy the entire transcript text manually. (Need help finding/copying? Watch the 'Demo Video' linked at the top right of this page).
- (Optional) Add any additional instructions after the transcript (e.g., 'Translate the summary to German.', 'Add a glossary of medical terms and jargon to the summary.').
For videos longer than 50 minutes:
- Select a Pro model for automatic summarization. Note that Google seems to not allow free use of Pro model anymore.
- If the Pro limit is reached (or if you prefer using your own tool), use the Copy Prompt button, paste the prompt into your AI tool, and run it there.
- 0:00 - Introduction to the Problem: The video introduces the topic of setting up a WireGuard Side-to-Side VPN with a Fritzbox, which the presenter sarcastically calls a "stupid little thing" due to its limitations in this context.
- 0:23 - Demonstration Goal: The aim is to show how to configure a side-to-side VPN between a Fritzbox and an IP464 cloud router, and then analyze packet behavior with Wireshark.
- 0:46 - Initial Fritzbox State: The Fritzbox is shown connected to DSL with no existing VPN configurations.
- 0:59 - Cloud Router & Peer Setup: A new IP464 cloud router gateway is configured, defining two WireGuard peers: "Fritzbox" (Peer 1) and "my PC" (Peer 2). Internal IP addresses (e.g., 10.7.0.0/20) and the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) are defined for routing.
- 2:11 - Routing Table Configuration: A route is added on the cloud router to direct traffic destined for the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) towards the Fritzbox's WireGuard tunnel IP (10.7.0.2).
- 3:08 - Fritzbox WireGuard Import: The generated WireGuard configuration file is downloaded and imported into the Fritzbox. The Fritzbox successfully connects and acknowledges the remote network (10.7.0.0/20).
- 4:23 - PC WireGuard Configuration: The PC's WireGuard client is configured as Peer 2, setting its allowed IPs to include the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) to ensure traffic for that network is tunneled.
- 6:04 - Initial Connectivity Tests (Successes):
- Ping to the PC's own tunnel IP (10.7.0.3) works.
- Ping to the Cloud Router Gateway (10.7.0.1) works (~20ms latency).
- Ping to the Fritzbox's tunnel IP (10.7.0.2) works (~40ms latency), confirming the full tunnel path.
- Accessing the Fritzbox's web interface via its tunnel IP (10.7.0.2) works perfectly.
- 7:37 - The Core Problem Revealed (Failures):
- Pinging the Fritzbox's local LAN IP (192.168.178.1) appears to work, but the reply packet's source IP is observed to be 10.7.0.2 (the Fritzbox's tunnel IP), not the expected 192.168.178.1.
- Attempting to access the Fritzbox's web interface via its local LAN IP (192.168.178.1) fails.
- 9:48 - Wireshark Analysis & Source NAT Explanation: Using Wireshark, the presenter demonstrates that when a TCP SYN packet is sent to 192.168.178.1, the Fritzbox receives it and attempts to reply. However, the Fritzbox performs Source NAT, changing the source IP of the response packet from 192.168.178.1 to 10.7.0.2. The PC's operating system rejects this response because it comes from an unexpected source, thus preventing TCP sessions from establishing, while ICMP (ping) is less strict and still registers a reply.
- 13:17 - Conclusion and Proposed Solutions: The Fritzbox's unconfigurable Source NAT on VPN tunnel traffic makes it unsuitable for "clean" side-to-side VPNs, particularly for accessing TCP-based services on the remote LAN.
- Workaround: Implement Source NAT on the other side of the tunnel (on the PC/cloud router) to match the Fritzbox's behavior (less ideal).
- Recommended Solution: Place a dedicated device (e.g., a Raspberry Pi) behind the Fritzbox to handle the WireGuard VPN connection. This dedicated device will route traffic cleanly without unintended SNAT, with the Fritzbox simply forwarding relevant traffic to the Pi via a static route.
- 15:17 - Final Verdict: The Fritzbox, despite its "jack of all trades" nature, is deemed a "disaster" for specific, advanced networking tasks like proper side-to-side VPNs due to its unconfigurable NAT behavior.
- 0:00:02 The Explosive Allegation: The Wall Street Journal published a story about a letter Donald Trump allegedly sent to Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003. The letter reportedly featured a drawing of a naked woman and a poem about a "wonderful secret" they shared.
- 0:00:43 Trump's Preemptive Behavior: The video contextualizes the story by highlighting Trump's recent and strange behavior, where he has preemptively dismissed the unreleased Epstein files as "phony stuff" and a "hoax."
- 0:02:02 The Letter's Incriminating Content: The alleged typewritten note within the drawing contains several troubling phrases, including "enigmas never age" and the closing line, "may every day be another wonderful secret."
- 0:03:32 Trump's Strong Denial: In an interview with the Journal, Trump firmly denied writing the letter or drawing the picture, calling it a "fake thing," stating it wasn't his language, and threatening a lawsuit.
- 0:05:01 Corroborating Evidence via Others: While Trump is the only person to issue a firm denial, other individuals mentioned in the WSJ article as having written letters for the same birthday album, such as Alan Dershowitz, gave non-denial responses.
- 0:06:36 Contradicting the Denial: The video presents evidence that Trump has created and donated marker "doodles" for charity auctions in the past, directly contradicting his claim that "I don't draw pictures." This is compared to Prince Andrew's discredited "no sweat" denial.
- 0:08:35 The Bookbinder Connection: A key claim in the WSJ report—that the album was made by bookbinder Herbert Weitz—is corroborated by a 2003 archived version of the bookbinder's website, which lists Jeffrey Epstein as a client.
- 0:12:40 A Call for Real Evidence: In response, Trump has called on his potential AG to release grand jury transcripts. The narrator argues this is a distraction, as the central piece of evidence is the physical letter and album, which would not be in a transcript.
- 0:14:51 A Call for Caution and More Proof: The video concludes by urging viewers not to immediately dismiss or accept the story. While there is significant corroborating circumstantial evidence, the definitive proof—a photo of the letter itself—has not been released by the Wall Street Journal or the DOJ.
- 0:00 Impressive Value: The video introduces the Luckfox Lyra Zero W, a $17 single-board computer (SBC) capable of running a full Ubuntu environment with WiFi and 40 GPIO pins.
- 0:44 Hardware Specifications: The board is detailed, featuring a Rockchip RK3506B SOC (3x ARM Cortex-A7 cores), 512MB RAM, 256MB SPI flash, SD card slot, USB-C, and a MIPI DSI interface in a Pi Zero form factor.
- 3:23 Quick and Easy Setup: Out of the box, the device boots in under 12 seconds into a Buildroot OS and is immediately accessible via ADB over a single USB-C cable.
- 4:53 Low Power Consumption: Power measurement shows the device idles at approximately 130mA (around 0.65W at 5V), making it suitable for low-power applications.
- 6:14 Flashing and OS Options: The video demonstrates how to flash a new Buildroot image to the internal SPI flash and also showcases a custom-built Ubuntu 22.04 LTS image running from an SD card.
- 11:30 WiFi Configuration: A step-by-step guide is provided for configuring and connecting to a WiFi network on both the Buildroot and Ubuntu operating systems.
- 13:19 Performance Benchmarking: Using a custom Python script, the SBC's performance is benchmarked, showing it is significantly more powerful than microcontroller-class devices like the RP2040 and ESP32-P4.
- 17:21 Driving a DSI Display: The board is shown to be capable of driving a 10.1-inch, 1280x800 DSI touchscreen display directly with no extra configuration needed.
- 18:46 Full Desktop Environment: The video demonstrates the installation and use of a full graphical desktop (XFCE via
xubuntu-desktop
) on the device, showcasing a usable, albeit software-rendered and laggy, desktop experience. - 9:49 & 20:35 Giveaway and Availability: The presenter announces a giveaway for four of the boards and notes that they are available for purchase from his online store.
identifier: 4364
model: gemini-2.5-flash| input-price: 0.3 output-price: 2.5 max-context-length: 128_000
host: 193.8.40.111
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1XFj8PJRLYinclude_comments: None
include_timestamps: 1
include_glossary: None
output_language: en
cost: 0.008643999999999999
*Abstract:* This video demonstrates the setup and inherent limitations of a WireGuard side-to-side VPN connection using a consumer-grade AVM Fritzbox router and an IP464 cloud router. The presenter successfully establishes the VPN tunnel and confirms basic connectivity via ping and web interface access to the Fritzbox's tunnel IP. However, a critical issue is revealed: when attempting to access devices in the Fritzbox's local network, while ping responses are received, TCP-based services (like browser access) fail. Wireshark analysis conclusively shows that the Fritzbox performs unconfigurable Source Network Address Translation (SNAT) on outgoing VPN traffic originating from its LAN, changing the source IP of response packets from the expected local network address to its own WireGuard tunnel IP. This behavior breaks TCP sessions as the receiving end expects the original source IP. The video concludes by labeling the Fritzbox as "stupid" for this unconfigurable flaw in side-to-side VPN scenarios and suggests a workaround: using a dedicated device like a Raspberry Pi behind the Fritzbox to handle the VPN, circumventing the Fritzbox's unwanted NAT. *Summarizing the Transcript:* * *0:00 - Introduction to the Problem:* The video introduces the topic of setting up a WireGuard Side-to-Side VPN with a Fritzbox, which the presenter sarcastically calls a "stupid little thing" due to its limitations in this context. * *0:23 - Demonstration Goal:* The aim is to show how to configure a side-to-side VPN between a Fritzbox and an IP464 cloud router, and then analyze packet behavior with Wireshark. * *0:46 - Initial Fritzbox State:* The Fritzbox is shown connected to DSL with no existing VPN configurations. * *0:59 - Cloud Router & Peer Setup:* A new IP464 cloud router gateway is configured, defining two WireGuard peers: "Fritzbox" (Peer 1) and "my PC" (Peer 2). Internal IP addresses (e.g., 10.7.0.0/20) and the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) are defined for routing. * *2:11 - Routing Table Configuration:* A route is added on the cloud router to direct traffic destined for the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) towards the Fritzbox's WireGuard tunnel IP (10.7.0.2). * *3:08 - Fritzbox WireGuard Import:* The generated WireGuard configuration file is downloaded and imported into the Fritzbox. The Fritzbox successfully connects and acknowledges the remote network (10.7.0.0/20). * *4:23 - PC WireGuard Configuration:* The PC's WireGuard client is configured as Peer 2, setting its allowed IPs to include the Fritzbox's local network (192.168.178.0/24) to ensure traffic for that network is tunneled. * *6:04 - Initial Connectivity Tests (Successes):* * Ping to the PC's own tunnel IP (10.7.0.3) works. * Ping to the Cloud Router Gateway (10.7.0.1) works (~20ms latency). * Ping to the Fritzbox's tunnel IP (10.7.0.2) works (~40ms latency), confirming the full tunnel path. * Accessing the Fritzbox's web interface via its tunnel IP (10.7.0.2) works perfectly. * *7:37 - The Core Problem Revealed (Failures):* * Pinging the Fritzbox's local LAN IP (192.168.178.1) *appears* to work, but the reply packet's source IP is observed to be 10.7.0.2 (the Fritzbox's tunnel IP), not the expected 192.168.178.1. * Attempting to access the Fritzbox's web interface via its local LAN IP (192.168.178.1) *fails*. * *9:48 - Wireshark Analysis & Source NAT Explanation:* Using Wireshark, the presenter demonstrates that when a TCP SYN packet is sent to 192.168.178.1, the Fritzbox receives it and attempts to reply. However, the Fritzbox performs *Source NAT*, changing the source IP of the response packet from 192.168.178.1 to 10.7.0.2. The PC's operating system rejects this response because it comes from an unexpected source, thus preventing TCP sessions from establishing, while ICMP (ping) is less strict and still registers a reply. * *13:17 - Conclusion and Proposed Solutions:* The Fritzbox's unconfigurable Source NAT on VPN tunnel traffic makes it unsuitable for "clean" side-to-side VPNs, particularly for accessing TCP-based services on the remote LAN. * *Workaround:* Implement Source NAT on the *other* side of the tunnel (on the PC/cloud router) to match the Fritzbox's behavior (less ideal). * *Recommended Solution:* Place a dedicated device (e.g., a Raspberry Pi) behind the Fritzbox to handle the WireGuard VPN connection. This dedicated device will route traffic cleanly without unintended SNAT, with the Fritzbox simply forwarding relevant traffic to the Pi via a static route. * *15:17 - Final Verdict:* The Fritzbox, despite its "jack of all trades" nature, is deemed a "disaster" for specific, advanced networking tasks like proper side-to-side VPNs due to its unconfigurable NAT behavior. I used gemini-2.5-flash| input-price: 0.3 output-price: 2.5 max-context-length: 128_000 on rocketrecap dot com to summarize the transcript. Cost (if I didn't use the free tier): $0.0086 Input tokens: 17955 Output tokens: 1303
Abstract:
This video demonstrates the setup and inherent limitations of a WireGuard side-to-side VPN connection using a consumer-grade AVM Fritzbox router and an IP464 cloud router. The presenter successfully establishes the VPN tunnel and confirms basic connectivity via ping and web interface access to the Fritzbox's tunnel IP. However, a critical issue is revealed: when attempting to access devices in the Fritzbox's local network, while ping responses are received, TCP-based services (like browser access) fail. Wireshark analysis conclusively shows that the Fritzbox performs unconfigurable Source Network Address Translation (SNAT) on outgoing VPN traffic originating from its LAN, changing the source IP of response packets from the expected local network address to its own WireGuard tunnel IP. This behavior breaks TCP sessions as the receiving end expects the original source IP. The video concludes by labeling the Fritzbox as "stupid" for this unconfigurable flaw in side-to-side VPN scenarios and suggests a workaround: using a dedicated device like a Raspberry Pi behind the Fritzbox to handle the VPN, circumventing the Fritzbox's unwanted NAT.
Summarizing the Transcript:
Below, I will provide input for an example video (comprising of title, description, and transcript, in this order) and the corresponding abstract and summary I expect. Afterward, I will provide a new transcript that I want you to summarize in the same format. **Please give an abstract of the transcript and then summarize the transcript in a self-contained bullet list format.** Include starting timestamps, important details and key takeaways. Example Input: Fluidigm Polaris Part 2- illuminator and camera mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Subscribed 369 Share Download Clip Save 5,857 views Aug 26, 2024 Fluidigm Polaris part 1 : • Fluidigm Polaris (Part 1) - Biotech g... Ebay listings: https://www.ebay.co.uk/usr/mikeselect... Merch https://mikeselectricstuff.creator-sp... Transcript Follow along using the transcript. Show transcript mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Videos About Support on Patreon 40 Comments @robertwatsonbath 6 hours ago Thanks Mike. Ooof! - with the level of bodgery going on around 15:48 I think shame would have made me do a board re spin, out of my own pocket if I had to. 1 Reply @Muonium1 9 hours ago The green LED looks different from the others and uses phosphor conversion because of the "green gap" problem where green InGaN emitters suffer efficiency droop at high currents. Phosphide based emitters don't start becoming efficient until around 600nm so also can't be used for high power green emitters. See the paper and plot by Matthias Auf der Maur in his 2015 paper on alloy fluctuations in InGaN as the cause of reduced external quantum efficiency at longer (green) wavelengths. 4 Reply 1 reply @tafsirnahian669 10 hours ago (edited) Can this be used as an astrophotography camera? Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 6 hours ago Yes, but may need a shutter to avoid light during readout Reply @2010craggy 11 hours ago Narrowband filters we use in Astronomy (Astrophotography) are sided- they work best passing light in one direction so I guess the arrows on the filter frames indicate which way round to install them in the filter wheel. 1 Reply @vitukz 12 hours ago A mate with Channel @extractions&ire could use it 2 Reply @RobertGallop 19 hours ago That LED module says it can go up to 28 amps!!! 21 amps for 100%. You should see what it does at 20 amps! Reply @Prophes0r 19 hours ago I had an "Oh SHIT!" moment when I realized that the weird trapezoidal shape of that light guide was for keystone correction of the light source. Very clever. 6 Reply @OneBiOzZ 20 hours ago given the cost of the CCD you think they could have run another PCB for it 9 Reply @tekvax01 21 hours ago $20 thousand dollars per minute of run time! 1 Reply @tekvax01 22 hours ago "We spared no expense!" John Hammond Jurassic Park. *(that's why this thing costs the same as a 50-seat Greyhound Bus coach!) Reply @florianf4257 22 hours ago The smearing on the image could be due to the fact that you don't use a shutter, so you see brighter stripes under bright areas of the image as you still iluminate these pixels while the sensor data ist shifted out towards the top. I experienced this effect back at university with a LN-Cooled CCD for Spectroscopy. The stripes disapeared as soon as you used the shutter instead of disabling it in the open position (but fokussing at 100ms integration time and continuous readout with a focal plane shutter isn't much fun). 12 Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 12 hours ago I didn't think of that, but makes sense 2 Reply @douro20 22 hours ago (edited) The red LED reminds me of one from Roithner Lasertechnik. I have a Symbol 2D scanner which uses two very bright LEDs from that company, one red and one red-orange. The red-orange is behind a lens which focuses it into an extremely narrow beam. 1 Reply @RicoElectrico 23 hours ago PFG is Pulse Flush Gate according to the datasheet. Reply @dcallan812 23 hours ago Very interesting. 2x Reply @littleboot_ 1 day ago Cool interesting device Reply @dav1dbone 1 day ago I've stripped large projectors, looks similar, wonder if some of those castings are a magnesium alloy? Reply @kevywevvy8833 1 day ago ironic that some of those Phlatlight modules are used in some of the cheapest disco lights. 1 Reply 1 reply @bill6255 1 day ago Great vid - gets right into subject in title, its packed with information, wraps up quickly. Should get a YT award! imho 3 Reply @JAKOB1977 1 day ago (edited) The whole sensor module incl. a 5 grand 50mpix sensor for 49 £.. highest bid atm Though also a limited CCD sensor, but for the right buyer its a steal at these relative low sums. Architecture Full Frame CCD (Square Pixels) Total Number of Pixels 8304 (H) × 6220 (V) = 51.6 Mp Number of Effective Pixels 8208 (H) × 6164 (V) = 50.5 Mp Number of Active Pixels 8176 (H) × 6132 (V) = 50.1 Mp Pixel Size 6.0 m (H) × 6.0 m (V) Active Image Size 49.1 mm (H) × 36.8 mm (V) 61.3 mm (Diagonal), 645 1.1x Optical Format Aspect Ratio 4:3 Horizontal Outputs 4 Saturation Signal 40.3 ke− Output Sensitivity 31 V/e− Quantum Efficiency KAF−50100−CAA KAF−50100−AAA KAF−50100−ABA (with Lens) 22%, 22%, 16% (Peak R, G, B) 25% 62% Read Noise (f = 18 MHz) 12.5 e− Dark Signal (T = 60°C) 42 pA/cm2 Dark Current Doubling Temperature 5.7°C Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 70.2 dB Estimated Linear Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 69.3 dB Charge Transfer Efficiency Horizontal Vertical 0.999995 0.999999 Blooming Protection (4 ms Exposure Time) 800X Saturation Exposure Maximum Date Rate 18 MHz Package Ceramic PGA Cover Glass MAR Coated, 2 Sides or Clear Glass Features • TRUESENSE Transparent Gate Electrode for High Sensitivity • Ultra-High Resolution • Board Dynamic Range • Low Noise Architecture • Large Active Imaging Area Applications • Digitization • Mapping/Aerial • Photography • Scientific Thx for the tear down Mike, always a joy Reply @martinalooksatthings 1 day ago 15:49 that is some great bodging on of caps, they really didn't want to respin that PCB huh 8 Reply @RhythmGamer 1 day ago Was depressed today and then a new mike video dropped and now I’m genuinely happy to get my tear down fix 1 Reply @dine9093 1 day ago (edited) Did you transfrom into Mr Blobby for a moment there? 2 Reply @NickNorton 1 day ago Thanks Mike. Your videos are always interesting. 5 Reply @KeritechElectronics 1 day ago Heavy optics indeed... Spare no expense, cost no object. Splendid build quality. The CCD is a thing of beauty! 1 Reply @YSoreil 1 day ago The pricing on that sensor is about right, I looked in to these many years ago when they were still in production since it's the only large sensor you could actually buy. Really cool to see one in the wild. 2 Reply @snik2pl 1 day ago That leds look like from led projector Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago TDI = Time Domain Integration ? 1 Reply @wolpumba4099 1 day ago (edited) Maybe the camera should not be illuminated during readout. From the datasheet of the sensor (Onsemi): saturation 40300 electrons, read noise 12.5 electrons per pixel @ 18MHz (quite bad). quantum efficiency 62% (if it has micro lenses), frame rate 1 Hz. lateral overflow drain to prevent blooming protects against 800x (factor increases linearly with exposure time) saturation exposure (32e6 electrons per pixel at 4ms exposure time), microlens has +/- 20 degree acceptance angle i guess it would be good for astrophotography 4 Reply @txm100 1 day ago (edited) Babe wake up a new mikeselectricstuff has dropped! 9 Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago That looks like a finger-lakes filter wheel, however, for astronomy they'd never use such a large stepper. 1 Reply @MRooodddvvv 1 day ago yaaaaay ! more overcomplicated optical stuff ! 4 Reply 1 reply @NoPegs 1 day ago He lives! 11 Reply 1 reply Transcript 0:00 so I've stripped all the bits of the 0:01 optical system so basically we've got 0:03 the uh the camera 0:05 itself which is mounted on this uh very 0:09 complex 0:10 adjustment thing which obviously to set 0:13 you the various tilt and uh alignment 0:15 stuff then there's two of these massive 0:18 lenses I've taken one of these apart I 0:20 think there's something like about eight 0:22 or nine Optical elements in here these 0:25 don't seem to do a great deal in terms 0:26 of electr magnification they're obiously 0:28 just about getting the image to where it 0:29 uh where it needs to be just so that 0:33 goes like that then this Optical block I 0:36 originally thought this was made of some 0:37 s crazy heavy material but it's just 0:39 really the sum of all these Optical bits 0:41 are just ridiculously heavy those lenses 0:43 are about 4 kilos each and then there's 0:45 this very heavy very solid um piece that 0:47 goes in the middle and this is so this 0:49 is the filter wheel assembly with a 0:51 hilariously oversized steper 0:53 motor driving this wheel with these very 0:57 large narrow band filters so we've got 1:00 various different shades of uh 1:03 filters there five Al together that 1:06 one's actually just showing up a silver 1:07 that's actually a a red but fairly low 1:10 transmission orangey red blue green 1:15 there's an excess cover on this side so 1:16 the filters can be accessed and changed 1:19 without taking anything else apart even 1:21 this is like ridiculous it's like solid 1:23 aluminium this is just basically a cover 1:25 the actual wavelengths of these are um 1:27 488 525 570 630 and 700 NM not sure what 1:32 the suffix on that perhaps that's the uh 1:34 the width of the spectral line say these 1:37 are very narrow band filters most of 1:39 them are you very little light through 1:41 so it's still very tight narrow band to 1:43 match the um fluoresence of the dies 1:45 they're using in the biochemical process 1:48 and obviously to reject the light that's 1:49 being fired at it from that Illuminator 1:51 box and then there's a there's a second 1:53 one of these lenses then the actual sort 1:55 of samples below that so uh very serious 1:58 amount of very uh chunky heavy Optics 2:01 okay let's take a look at this light 2:02 source made by company Lumen Dynamics 2:04 who are now part of 2:06 excelitas self-contained unit power 2:08 connector USB and this which one of the 2:11 Cable Bundle said was a TTL interface 2:14 USB wasn't used in uh the fluid 2:17 application output here and I think this 2:19 is an input for um light feedback I 2:21 don't if it's regulated or just a measur 2:23 measurement facility and the uh fiber 2:27 assembly 2:29 Square Inlet there and then there's two 2:32 outputs which have uh lens assemblies 2:35 and this small one which goes back into 2:37 that small Port just Loops out of here 2:40 straight back in So on this side we've 2:42 got the electronics which look pretty 2:44 straightforward we've got a bit of power 2:45 supply stuff over here and we've got 2:48 separate drivers for each wavelength now 2:50 interesting this is clearly been very 2:52 specifically made for this application 2:54 you I was half expecting like say some 2:56 generic drivers that could be used for a 2:58 number of different things but actually 3:00 literally specified the exact wavelength 3:02 on the PCB there is provision here for 3:04 385 NM which isn't populated but this is 3:07 clearly been designed very specifically 3:09 so these four drivers look the same but 3:10 then there's two higher power ones for 3:12 575 and 3:14 520 a slightly bigger heat sink on this 3:16 575 section there a p 24 which is 3:20 providing USB interface USB isolator the 3:23 USB interface just presents as a comport 3:26 I did have a quick look but I didn't 3:27 actually get anything sensible um I did 3:29 dump the Pi code out and there's a few 3:31 you a few sort of commands that you 3:32 could see in text but I didn't actually 3:34 manage to get it working properly I 3:36 found some software for related version 3:38 but it didn't seem to want to talk to it 3:39 but um I say that wasn't used for the 3:41 original application it might be quite 3:42 interesting to get try and get the Run 3:44 hours count out of it and the TTL 3:46 interface looks fairly straightforward 3:48 we've got positions for six opto 3:50 isolators but only five five are 3:52 installed so that corresponds with the 3:54 unused thing so I think this hopefully 3:56 should be as simple as just providing a 3:57 ttrl signal for each color to uh enable 4:00 it a big heat sink here which is there I 4:03 think there's like a big S of metal 4:04 plate through the middle of this that 4:05 all the leads are mounted on the other 4:07 side so this is heat sinking it with a 4:09 air flow from a uh just a fan in here 4:13 obviously don't have the air flow 4:14 anywhere near the Optics so conduction 4:17 cool through to this plate that's then 4:18 uh air cooled got some pots which are 4:21 presumably power 4:22 adjustments okay let's take a look at 4:24 the other side which is uh much more 4:27 interesting see we've got some uh very 4:31 uh neatly Twisted cable assemblies there 4:35 a bunch of leads so we've got one here 4:37 475 up here 430 NM 630 575 and 520 4:44 filters and dcro mirrors a quick way to 4:48 see what's white is if we just shine 4:49 some white light through 4:51 here not sure how it is is to see on the 4:54 camera but shining white light we do 4:55 actually get a bit of red a bit of blue 4:57 some yellow here so the obstacle path 5:00 575 it goes sort of here bounces off 5:03 this mirror and goes out the 520 goes 5:07 sort of down here across here and up 5:09 there 630 goes basically straight 5:13 through 5:15 430 goes across there down there along 5:17 there and the 475 goes down here and 5:20 left this is the light sensing thing 5:22 think here there's just a um I think 5:24 there a photo diode or other sensor 5:26 haven't actually taken that off and 5:28 everything's fixed down to this chunk of 5:31 aluminium which acts as the heat 5:32 spreader that then conducts the heat to 5:33 the back side for the heat 5:35 sink and the actual lead packages all 5:38 look fairly similar except for this one 5:41 on the 575 which looks quite a bit more 5:44 substantial big spay 5:46 Terminals and the interface for this 5:48 turned out to be extremely simple it's 5:50 literally a 5V TTL level to enable each 5:54 color doesn't seem to be any tensity 5:56 control but there are some additional 5:58 pins on that connector that weren't used 5:59 in the through time thing so maybe 6:01 there's some extra lines that control 6:02 that I couldn't find any data on this uh 6:05 unit and the um their current product 6:07 range is quite significantly different 6:09 so we've got the uh blue these 6:13 might may well be saturating the camera 6:16 so they might look a bit weird so that's 6:17 the 430 6:18 blue the 575 6:24 yellow uh 6:26 475 light blue 6:29 the uh 520 6:31 green and the uh 630 red now one 6:36 interesting thing I noticed for the 6:39 575 it's actually it's actually using a 6:42 white lead and then filtering it rather 6:44 than using all the other ones are using 6:46 leads which are the fundamental colors 6:47 but uh this is actually doing white and 6:50 it's a combination of this filter and 6:52 the dichroic mirrors that are turning to 6:55 Yellow if we take the filter out and a 6:57 lot of the a lot of the um blue content 7:00 is going this way the red is going 7:02 straight through these two mirrors so 7:05 this is clearly not reflecting much of 7:08 that so we end up with the yellow coming 7:10 out of uh out of there which is a fairly 7:14 light yellow color which you don't 7:16 really see from high intensity leads so 7:19 that's clearly why they've used the 7:20 white to uh do this power consumption of 7:23 the white is pretty high so going up to 7:25 about 2 and 1 half amps on that color 7:27 whereas most of the other colors are 7:28 only drawing half an amp or so at 24 7:30 volts the uh the green is up to about 7:32 1.2 but say this thing is uh much 7:35 brighter and if you actually run all the 7:38 colors at the same time you get a fairly 7:41 reasonable um looking white coming out 7:43 of it and one thing you might just be 7:45 out to notice is there is some sort 7:46 color banding around here that's not 7:49 getting uh everything s completely 7:51 concentric and I think that's where this 7:53 fiber optic thing comes 7:58 in I'll 8:00 get a couple of Fairly accurately shaped 8:04 very sort of uniform color and looking 8:06 at What's um inside here we've basically 8:09 just got this Square Rod so this is 8:12 clearly yeah the lights just bouncing 8:13 off all the all the various sides to um 8:16 get a nice uniform illumination uh this 8:19 back bit looks like it's all potted so 8:21 nothing I really do to get in there I 8:24 think this is fiber so I have come 8:26 across um cables like this which are 8:27 liquid fill but just looking through the 8:30 end of this it's probably a bit hard to 8:31 see it does look like there fiber ends 8:34 going going on there and so there's this 8:36 feedback thing which is just obviously 8:39 compensating for the any light losses 8:41 through here to get an accurate 8:43 representation of uh the light that's 8:45 been launched out of these two 8:47 fibers and you see uh 8:49 these have got this sort of trapezium 8:54 shape light guides again it's like a 8:56 sort of acrylic or glass light guide 9:00 guess projected just to make the right 9:03 rectangular 9:04 shape and look at this Center assembly 9:07 um the light output doesn't uh change 9:10 whether you feed this in or not so it's 9:11 clear not doing any internal Clos Loop 9:14 control obviously there may well be some 9:16 facility for it to do that but it's not 9:17 being used in this 9:19 application and so this output just 9:21 produces a voltage on the uh outle 9:24 connector proportional to the amount of 9:26 light that's present so there's a little 9:28 diffuser in the back there 9:30 and then there's just some kind of uh 9:33 Optical sensor looks like a 9:35 chip looking at the lead it's a very 9:37 small package on the PCB with this lens 9:40 assembly over the top and these look 9:43 like they're actually on a copper 9:44 Metalized PCB for maximum thermal 9:47 performance and yeah it's a very small 9:49 package looks like it's a ceramic 9:51 package and there's a thermister there 9:53 for temperature monitoring this is the 9:56 475 blue one this is the 520 need to 9:59 Green which is uh rather different OB 10:02 it's a much bigger D with lots of bond 10:04 wise but also this looks like it's using 10:05 a phosphor if I shine a blue light at it 10:08 lights up green so this is actually a 10:10 phosphor conversion green lead which 10:12 I've I've come across before they want 10:15 that specific wavelength so they may be 10:17 easier to tune a phosphor than tune the 10:20 um semiconductor material to get the uh 10:23 right right wavelength from the lead 10:24 directly uh red 630 similar size to the 10:28 blue one or does seem to have a uh a 10:31 lens on top of it there is a sort of red 10:33 coloring to 10:35 the die but that doesn't appear to be 10:38 fluorescent as far as I can 10:39 tell and the white one again a little 10:41 bit different sort of much higher 10:43 current 10:46 connectors a makeer name on that 10:48 connector flot light not sure if that's 10:52 the connector or the lead 10:54 itself and obviously with the phosphor 10:56 and I'd imagine that phosphor may well 10:58 be tuned to get the maximum to the uh 5 11:01 cenm and actually this white one looks 11:04 like a St fairly standard product I just 11:06 found it in Mouse made by luminous 11:09 devices in fact actually I think all 11:11 these are based on various luminous 11:13 devices modules and they're you take 11:17 looks like they taking the nearest 11:18 wavelength and then just using these 11:19 filters to clean it up to get a precise 11:22 uh spectral line out of it so quite a 11:25 nice neat and um extreme 11:30 bright light source uh sure I've got any 11:33 particular use for it so I think this 11:35 might end up on 11:36 eBay but uh very pretty to look out and 11:40 without the uh risk of burning your eyes 11:43 out like you do with lasers so I thought 11:45 it would be interesting to try and 11:46 figure out the runtime of this things 11:48 like this we usually keep some sort 11:49 record of runtime cuz leads degrade over 11:51 time I couldn't get any software to work 11:52 through the USB face but then had a 11:54 thought probably going to be writing the 11:55 runtime periodically to the e s prom so 11:58 I just just scope up that and noticed it 12:00 was doing right every 5 minutes so I 12:02 just ran it for a while periodically 12:04 reading the E squ I just held the pick 12:05 in in reset and um put clip over to read 12:07 the square prom and found it was writing 12:10 one location per color every 5 minutes 12:12 so if one color was on it would write 12:14 that location every 5 minutes and just 12:16 increment it by one so after doing a few 12:18 tests with different colors of different 12:19 time periods it looked extremely 12:21 straightforward it's like a four bite 12:22 count for each color looking at the 12:24 original data that was in it all the 12:26 colors apart from Green were reading 12:28 zero and the green was reading four 12:30 indicating a total 20 minutes run time 12:32 ever if it was turned on run for a short 12:34 time then turned off that might not have 12:36 been counted but even so indicates this 12:37 thing wasn't used a great deal the whole 12:40 s process of doing a run can be several 12:42 hours but it'll only be doing probably 12:43 the Imaging at the end of that so you 12:46 wouldn't expect to be running for a long 12:47 time but say a single color for 20 12:50 minutes over its whole lifetime does 12:52 seem a little bit on the low side okay 12:55 let's look at the camera un fortunately 12:57 I managed to not record any sound when I 12:58 did this it's also a couple of months 13:00 ago so there's going to be a few details 13:02 that I've forgotten so I'm just going to 13:04 dub this over the original footage so um 13:07 take the lid off see this massive great 13:10 heat sink so this is a pel cool camera 13:12 we've got this blower fan producing a 13:14 fair amount of air flow through 13:16 it the connector here there's the ccds 13:19 mounted on the board on the 13:24 right this unplugs so we've got a bit of 13:27 power supply stuff on here 13:29 USB interface I think that's the Cyprus 13:32 microcontroller High speeded USB 13:34 interface there's a zyink spon fpga some 13:40 RAM and there's a couple of ATD 13:42 converters can't quite read what those 13:45 those are but anal 13:47 devices um little bit of bodgery around 13:51 here extra decoupling obviously they 13:53 have having some noise issues this is 13:55 around the ram chip quite a lot of extra 13:57 capacitors been added there 13:59 uh there's a couple of amplifiers prior 14:01 to the HD converter buffers or Andor 14:05 amplifiers taking the CCD 14:08 signal um bit more power spy stuff here 14:11 this is probably all to do with 14:12 generating the various CCD bias voltages 14:14 they uh need quite a lot of exotic 14:18 voltages next board down is just a 14:20 shield and an interconnect 14:24 boardly shielding the power supply stuff 14:26 from some the more sensitive an log 14:28 stuff 14:31 and this is the bottom board which is 14:32 just all power supply 14:34 stuff as you can see tons of capacitors 14:37 or Transformer in 14:42 there and this is the CCD which is a uh 14:47 very impressive thing this is a kf50 100 14:50 originally by true sense then codec 14:53 there ON 14:54 Semiconductor it's 50 megapixels uh the 14:58 only price I could find was this one 15:00 5,000 bucks and the architecture you can 15:03 see there actually two separate halves 15:04 which explains the Dual AZ converters 15:06 and two amplifiers it's literally split 15:08 down the middle and duplicated so it's 15:10 outputting two streams in parallel just 15:13 to keep the bandwidth sensible and it's 15:15 got this amazing um diffraction effects 15:18 it's got micro lenses over the pixel so 15:20 there's there's a bit more Optics going 15:22 on than on a normal 15:25 sensor few more bodges on the CCD board 15:28 including this wire which isn't really 15:29 tacked down very well which is a bit uh 15:32 bit of a mess quite a few bits around 15:34 this board where they've uh tacked 15:36 various bits on which is not super 15:38 impressive looks like CCD drivers on the 15:40 left with those 3 ohm um damping 15:43 resistors on the 15:47 output get a few more little bodges 15:50 around here some of 15:52 the and there's this separator the 15:54 silica gel to keep the moisture down but 15:56 there's this separator that actually 15:58 appears to be cut from piece of 15:59 antistatic 16:04 bag and this sort of thermal block on 16:06 top of this stack of three pel Cola 16:12 modules so as with any Stacks they get 16:16 um larger as they go back towards the 16:18 heat sink because each P's got to not 16:20 only take the heat from the previous but 16:21 also the waste heat which is quite 16:27 significant you see a little temperature 16:29 sensor here that copper block which 16:32 makes contact with the back of the 16:37 CCD and this's the back of the 16:40 pelas this then contacts the heat sink 16:44 on the uh rear there a few thermal pads 16:46 as well for some of the other power 16:47 components on this 16:51 PCB okay I've connected this uh camera 16:54 up I found some drivers on the disc that 16:56 seem to work under Windows 7 couldn't 16:58 get to install under Windows 11 though 17:01 um in the absence of any sort of lens or 17:03 being bothered to the proper amount I've 17:04 just put some f over it and put a little 17:06 pin in there to make a pinhole lens and 17:08 software gives a few options I'm not 17:11 entirely sure what all these are there's 17:12 obviously a clock frequency 22 MHz low 17:15 gain and with PFG no idea what that is 17:19 something something game programmable 17:20 Something game perhaps ver exposure 17:23 types I think focus is just like a 17:25 continuous grab until you tell it to 17:27 stop not entirely sure all these options 17:30 are obviously exposure time uh triggers 17:33 there ex external hardware trigger inut 17:35 you just trigger using a um thing on 17:37 screen so the resolution is 8176 by 17:40 6132 and you can actually bin those 17:42 where you combine multiple pixels to get 17:46 increased gain at the expense of lower 17:48 resolution down this is a 10sec exposure 17:51 obviously of the pin hole it's very uh 17:53 intensitive so we just stand still now 17:56 downloading it there's the uh exposure 17:59 so when it's 18:01 um there's a little status thing down 18:03 here so that tells you the um exposure 18:07 [Applause] 18:09 time it's this is just it 18:15 downloading um it is quite I'm seeing 18:18 quite a lot like smearing I think that I 18:20 don't know whether that's just due to 18:21 pixels overloading or something else I 18:24 mean yeah it's not it's not um out of 18:26 the question that there's something not 18:27 totally right about this camera 18:28 certainly was bodge wise on there um I 18:31 don't I'd imagine a camera like this 18:32 it's got a fairly narrow range of 18:34 intensities that it's happy with I'm not 18:36 going to spend a great deal of time on 18:38 this if you're interested in this camera 18:40 maybe for astronomy or something and 18:42 happy to sort of take the risk of it may 18:44 not be uh perfect I'll um I think I'll 18:47 stick this on eBay along with the 18:48 Illuminator I'll put a link down in the 18:50 description to the listing take your 18:52 chances to grab a bargain so for example 18:54 here we see this vertical streaking so 18:56 I'm not sure how normal that is this is 18:58 on fairly bright scene looking out the 19:02 window if I cut the exposure time down 19:04 on that it's now 1 second 19:07 exposure again most of the image 19:09 disappears again this is looks like it's 19:11 possibly over still overloading here go 19:14 that go down to say say quarter a 19:16 second so again I think there might be 19:19 some Auto gain control going on here um 19:21 this is with the PFG option let's try 19:23 turning that off and see what 19:25 happens so I'm not sure this is actually 19:27 more streaking or which just it's 19:29 cranked up the gain all the dis display 19:31 gray scale to show what um you know the 19:33 range of things that it's captured 19:36 there's one of one of 12 things in the 19:38 software there's um you can see of you 19:40 can't seem to read out the temperature 19:42 of the pelta cooler but you can set the 19:44 temperature and if you said it's a 19:46 different temperature you see the power 19:48 consumption jump up running the cooler 19:50 to get the temperature you requested but 19:52 I can't see anything anywhere that tells 19:54 you whether the cool is at the at the 19:56 temperature other than the power 19:57 consumption going down and there's no 19:59 temperature read out 20:03 here and just some yeah this is just 20:05 sort of very basic software I'm sure 20:07 there's like an API for more 20:09 sophisticated 20:10 applications but so if you know anything 20:12 more about these cameras please um stick 20:14 in the 20:15 comments um incidentally when I was 20:18 editing I didn't notice there was a bent 20:19 pin on the um CCD but I did fix that 20:22 before doing these tests and also 20:24 reactivated the um silica gel desicant 20:26 cuz I noticed it was uh I was getting 20:28 bit of condensation on the window but um 20:31 yeah so a couple of uh interesting but 20:34 maybe not particularly uh useful pieces 20:37 of Kit except for someone that's got a 20:38 very specific use so um I'll stick a 20:42 I'll stick these on eBay put a link in 20:44 the description and say hopefully 20:45 someone could actually make some uh good 20:47 use of these things Example Output: **Abstract:** This video presents Part 2 of a teardown focusing on the optical components of a Fluidigm Polaris biotechnology instrument, specifically the multi-wavelength illuminator and the high-resolution CCD camera. The Lumen Dynamics illuminator unit is examined in detail, revealing its construction using multiple high-power LEDs (430nm, 475nm, 520nm, 575nm, 630nm) combined via dichroic mirrors and filters. A square fiber optic rod is used to homogenize the light. A notable finding is the use of a phosphor-converted white LED filtered to achieve the 575nm output. The unit features simple TTL activation for each color, conduction cooling, and internal homogenization optics. Analysis of its EEPROM suggests extremely low operational runtime. The camera module teardown showcases a 50 Megapixel ON Semiconductor KAF-50100 CCD sensor with micro-lenses, cooled by a multi-stage Peltier stack. The control electronics include an FPGA and a USB interface. Significant post-manufacturing modifications ("bodges") are observed on the camera's circuit boards. Basic functional testing using vendor software and a pinhole lens confirms image capture but reveals prominent vertical streaking artifacts, the cause of which remains uncertain (potential overload, readout artifact, or fault). **Exploring the Fluidigm Polaris: A Detailed Look at its High-End Optics and Camera System** * **0:00 High-End Optics:** The system utilizes heavy, high-quality lenses and mirrors for precise imaging, weighing around 4 kilos each. * **0:49 Narrow Band Filters:** A filter wheel with five narrow band filters (488, 525, 570, 630, and 700 nm) ensures accurate fluorescence detection and rejection of excitation light. * **2:01 Customizable Illumination:** The Lumen Dynamics light source offers five individually controllable LED wavelengths (430, 475, 520, 575, 630 nm) with varying power outputs. The 575nm yellow LED is uniquely achieved using a white LED with filtering. * **3:45 TTL Control:** The light source is controlled via a simple TTL interface, enabling easy on/off switching for each LED color. * **12:55 Sophisticated Camera:** The system includes a 50-megapixel Kodak KAI-50100 CCD camera with a Peltier cooling system for reduced noise. * **14:54 High-Speed Data Transfer:** The camera features dual analog-to-digital converters to manage the high data throughput of the 50-megapixel sensor, which is effectively two 25-megapixel sensors operating in parallel. * **18:11 Possible Issues:** The video creator noted some potential issues with the camera, including image smearing. * **18:11 Limited Dynamic Range:** The camera's sensor has a limited dynamic range, making it potentially challenging to capture scenes with a wide range of brightness levels. * **11:45 Low Runtime:** Internal data suggests the system has seen minimal usage, with only 20 minutes of recorded runtime for the green LED. * **20:38 Availability on eBay:** Both the illuminator and camera are expected to be listed for sale on eBay. Here is the real transcript. Please summarize it: 00:00:01 Hello everyone, today I want to 00:00:01 show you what a stupid little thing 00:00:05 a Fritzbox can be when it comes to this 00:00:07 topic. Side to Side VPN connection 00:00:10 using Zeg Guardard. And yes, you 00:00:12 heard right, a box like this is 00:00:14 often an all-rounder and can be found in 00:00:16 many households, but 00:00:18 nevertheless, it remains that way. Such a thing 00:00:20 is, after all, a small, stupid thing. But 00:00:23 why am I telling you this? I'll 00:00:25 now show you step by step how 00:00:27 I'm going to set up a side-to-side VPN 00:00:29 connection, like the one this box 00:00:30 offers us, on the Fritzbox 00:00:33 with the new cloud router from 00:00:35 IP464 and we'll take a look at the Wire Shark 00:00:39 and the packets and 00:00:41 see how small this 00:00:44 Fritzbox actually is. Let's 00:00:46 get started. So, we have 00:00:48 the Fritzbox here as usual. You see, it is 00:00:50 currently connected to DSL as normal 00:00:52 . No problem at all. And 00:00:54 we don't have anything here under Internet Sharing, 00:00:56 VPN Wegard. 00:00:59 Wonderful. We go to the cloud router. 00:01:01 We are adding a new cloud router. 00:01:03 We want to access this Fritzbox from outside, from 00:01:05 somewhere on the Internet, 00:01:07 or with VPN through this 00:01:11 Fritzbox to the end devices in the 00:01:13 background. So a side- 00:01:15 to-side VPN connection. But since we 00:01:18 have this V6 problem and 00:01:19 what not, we use 00:01:21 a gateway like this. But all right, 00:01:23 let's get everything set up. We now have a 00:01:24 new gateway here, and we're setting up 00:01:26 a second pier right away, because I 00:01:28 want to 00:01:29 connect to my PC somehow. But 00:01:31 let's start with Pier 1. 00:01:33 So, we go in here, let's 00:01:35 just say Pier 1 is ultimately the 00:01:37 Fritzbox and press save so that it 00:01:39 connects, let's say 00:01:41 a Keep Live, then it does it 00:01:42 automatically with a Keep and 00:01:45 down here with the Allocate addresses, I'll 00:01:47 do it a bit quicker, we'll get 00:01:49 to a DeepDive video at some point 00:01:50 , I'll enter that now, all right 00:01:53 10.7.0.0/20 00:01:55 0/20 00:01:56 this Fritzbox can now simply 00:02:04 communicate outwards via the Load IP addresses so that you 00:02:04 can also send me response packets via the 00:02:06 corresponding tunnel. This completes the 00:02:09 configuration for the Fritzbox 00:02:11 . We 00:02:12 still have to set up a route now, but 00:02:14 okay. Configuration is now 00:02:16 complete. Now we'll quickly create 00:02:17 the route for the Fritzbox. That means 00:02:19 we're saying new routing table here, 00:02:22 or new entry 122 168 178. 00:02:26 That's the network behind this Fritzbox 00:02:28 here.0/24 00:02:31 to 10,702. 00:02:34 This is the IP address of the 00:02:35 Fritzbox. 10702 00:02:38 is also there and we say route. 00:02:41 Now my gateway knows. Understood. 00:02:43 Requests come in towards 00:02:45 network 178 side to side. 00:02:49 Please just send this to the Fritzbox, to the 00:02:51 box here. She knows the net and she holds 00:02:53 this net tight. Everything's fine, get in touch 00:02:55 . We can check this by 00:02:57 clicking here on Getli Rooting Table 00:03:00 and there it says 178.0/24. 00:03:04 Please send 10702 to this 00:03:06 Fritzbox. So everything is wonderful. We 00:03:09 go back, we go to the pier and we 00:03:11 now get the configuration from 00:03:13 this Fritzbox. That means we 00:03:14 just say show config, everything is 00:03:17 in there. We get an IP, a bit of 00:03:18 DNS, a bit of private key, and here 00:03:21 under Load IPs we simply see 00:03:23 10700. This means that this Fritzbox 00:03:26 is allowed to send packets in the direction of 10700/20 00:03:31 . 00:03:33 So I have everything I need. I 00:03:35 now say download file here, go to my 00:03:37 Fritzbox, add connection, then 00:03:40 I clearly say I want side to side 00:03:42 . All right, we have them all. 00:03:44 Then he asks me the question, has 00:03:46 anyone else already 00:03:48 created this configuration? Yes, of course, 00:03:49 of course I do. So yes, we 00:03:52 simply enter a name for this 00:03:53 connection and select our 00:03:55 neatly created 00:03:58 configuration file and simply say 00:04:00 come on, finish. Just pump it all 00:04:02 in there. She doesn't complain either 00:04:04 . She says everything is fine. I 00:04:06 recognized everything, all IP addresses were 00:04:08 nice and clean. It now also says 00:04:10 remote network 10,700/20. 00:04:17 This means that it also knows where to 00:04:17 send packages if 00:04:19 any packages need to be sent in that direction 00:04:22 . Now 00:04:24 we have to finish my PC. 00:04:26 We said that we have a 00:04:27 second pier. This is the second pier 00:04:28 here. Edit Pier. Let’s call it 00:04:30 my PC. He has the 03 at the end. 00:04:34 We don't have to do that. We don't have to 00:04:35 do anything. We don't have to do anything. 00:04:36 We don't have to do anything. We don't have to 00:04:37 do anything. We press save. The 00:04:39 only thing we can do is 00:04:40 , I don't want my 00:04:42 PC to send all sorts of things everywhere, 00:04:44 I can 00:04:46 just tell my configuration here to use this 00:04:48 tunnel to send 10700 so that 00:04:51 my PC can reach everything, and 00:04:54 of course my configuration wants to 00:04:56 get into the Fritzbox network. No problem, let 00:04:59 's make 1 and 2168 1780/24. 00:05:07 So, now my configuration knows 00:05:07 about my device. It could 00:05:09 be my cell phone here too. Whatever what I know 00:05:11 now all right, if you want to go to 178.0/24 00:05:17 , off into the tunnel with it. 00:05:19 Configuration complete. We're not doing 00:05:21 anything different here. Oh, you see 00:05:22 , the Fritzbox is already green. The 00:05:23 Fritzbox has already connected. We 00:05:25 see it here. Now we need to 00:05:27 take our configuration. I just say 00:05:29 Copy to Clipboard. It has everything 00:05:31 I need. Open my Wirard. 00:05:33 Just edit this. Insert that 00:05:35 there. Everything in there. Wonderful. We 00:05:38 press save. We press 00:05:39 activate. We are connected. The 00:05:41 only thing I have to do now is 00:05:45 unplug the black cable from the Fritzbox, because that was my 00:05:45 direct connection from my PC 00:05:47 . To be on the safe side, 00:05:48 we briefly press deactivate, 00:05:50 activate again. So, because now my PC is 00:05:53 no longer connected to this Fritzbox 00:05:55 . It only has internet 00:05:57 and now, theoretically, we should be able to 00:06:04 access this Fritzbox via the internet. And yes, how do 00:06:04 you always test that? You always test 00:06:05 yourself from the smallest to the largest. 00:06:08 Then I would suggest that we 00:06:10 simply do the whole thing by 00:06:11 opening a nice CMD window 00:06:13 and then pinging our way 00:06:15 through it. So, my PC has 00:06:17 0.3. 00:06:19 Oh, look, it even says 00:06:21 ping 10.70.3. 00:06:24 I can ping myself. Okay, 00:06:26 minus less than a millisecond. Everything's 00:06:28 cool. Then let's just make 00:06:30 the gateway, so that we can reach the 7.0.1, 00:06:34 which 00:06:36 is the gateway of the IPv64 Cloud Router 00:06:38 . We can see that it's already over 20 00:06:40 milliseconds. We can still see here on the 00:06:42 left that a few 00:06:44 kilobytes are zipping around, right? 00:06:45 You can see everything beautifully. So 00:06:47 let's just take those two 00:06:50 . The second is the Fritzbox. Here, too, 00:06:52 you can tell quite clearly from the 00:06:54 milliseconds. My 00:06:56 connection goes out to the Cloud Gateway 00:06:58 at IP464 and goes back from the Cloud Gateway 00:07:01 to the DSL line 00:07:03 . Totals to about 40 00:07:06 milliseconds. Sure, forward weight 20 00:07:08 milliseconds, reverse weight 20 00:07:09 milliseconds, completely normal. Two 00:07:11 different internet connections, everything's 00:07:13 cool. That means we can 00:07:15 actually get this 10.7.0.2 00:07:18 . What's the 00:07:20 best way to look at this and prove it even more 00:07:22 ? Sure, we just enter 00:07:24 7.0.2 here in the browser. 00:07:27 Look at that. What a coincidence. We 00:07:29 can access this Fritzbox quite 00:07:32 normally. Works perfectly. Well, 00:07:35 now the problems 00:07:37 finally begin, because we have 00:07:38 n't even tested the remote 00:07:41 network once yet, and 00:07:43 we're going to take a look at that now. And first of all, 00:07:45 I'm going to cause a lot of confusion. We 00:07:47 know that my PC can be connected side to side 00:07:50 using this 00:07:51 configuration, using the routing that 00:07:54 we have set up here. We'll take 00:07:56 another look at it. Routing table, there it 00:07:58 is. Anything that goes towards 178.0 00:08:02 , please send it to the Fritzbox. 00:08:04 What is written there is also correct. 00:08:06 We'll take a look. Now comes the 00:08:07 confusion. Ping 192 168178.1 00:08:15 is the Fritzbox here. We said, 00:08:15 all right, we can ping there via this 00:08:16 tunnel. Ping off. 00:08:19 Wonderful, we get an answer. 00:08:21 Aha, okay. Now the very first thing we think is 00:08:23 , 00:08:25 that actually looks wonderful. 00:08:26 That's what I ultimately 00:08:28 want. But now there is a small 00:08:30 difference. Do you see the difference 00:08:31 between the point 1 is 00:08:34 here. Do you see the difference? 40 00:08:36 milliseconds actually looks cool, 00:08:37 right? Now let's do the whole thing again 00:08:40 to 10.7.0.2, 00:08:42 which is also the Fritzbox. Hm. 40 00:08:44 milliseconds is also possible, but 00:08:47 here you have to pay attention not to the 00:08:49 command that I send, but to the 00:08:51 response, so to speak, 00:08:54 and then things get complicated. I'll 00:08:56 do it again. 178.1. 00:08:59 What do you notice about the answer? I 00:09:02 receive a reply from 00:09:06 10.70. 00:09:09 and not from the goal I 00:09:11 mentioned. And now I'll show you in 00:09:13 more detail why this is a problem 00:09:15 and what the 00:09:18 stupid little Fritzbox is doing wrong. 00:09:20 Look, we were just able to 00:09:22 type this in the browser perfectly. We get 00:09:24 to 10.7.0.2, we can work, we 00:09:26 get to the Fritzbox, that's no 00:09:28 problem. In theory you should 00:09:30 then be able to say 192 168 178.1, 00:09:35 which is the Fritzbox. 00:09:38 Yes, it doesn't work. It's weird. I can ping 00:09:41 , but things 00:09:44 like opening a browser do 00:09:46 n't work anymore. It's kind of weird. 00:09:48 I'll now show you why this 00:09:50 is the case. That means if we 00:09:52 go here now and just do 00:09:53 a Wirk and 00:09:55 say mercilessly, please listen to 00:10:04 what is happening here on my Wiru interface, on my PC. Let's 00:10:04 go to the browser and refresh 00:10:06 the browser. Take a look at the Wire 00:10:08 Shark and we can end the Wire Shark now 00:10:11 . I know it was 00:10:12 all very, very small. I'd have to 00:10:13 roll a little closer, but you can still 00:10:15 see something perfectly. Let's go 00:10:18 to line 7 here. My PC 00:10:22 just did the following: 00:10:24 opened the browser and said: "Hey, 00:10:26 Fritzbox, hello." With the IP address 00:10:29 178.1, h and sends you 00:10:33 a synd packet on port 7. 00:10:37 The Fritzbox also says, oh, there's a 00:10:41 data packet. Super 1A. And then 00:10:44 the Fritzbox says: "Yes, I'm 00:10:46 replying to the packet." You can 00:10:48 clearly see here that a 00:10:50 synac package is coming. 00:10:52 The big problem is that the Fritzbox does 00:10:54 not respond with its IP address 00:10:57 178.1,1, but rather it responds, just 00:11:00 as we have just seen here, 00:11:02 with its tunnel IP address, instead of with 00:11:05 its side to side IP address. Well, and since 00:11:09 ICMP is ultimately different from 00:11:13 TCP, say my PC is here or my browser 00:11:16 or my network interface, 00:11:18 guess something, I don't 00:11:19 care. Wait a minute, wait a minute. I have 00:11:25 received a response package from someone. 00:11:25 I didn't even mention that one. Wait 00:11:27 with that one. Wait a minute. Stop, stop. I do 00:11:29 n't want to talk to him. I'm 00:11:31 not interested in the 10702. I 00:11:33 mentioned the 1178.1. Why am I getting 00:11:37 your answer from you, bum? Well, and 00:11:39 that's ultimately the big 00:11:41 problem, that the Fritzbox goes and 00:11:44 then uses this nice alleged, let's 00:11:47 say, yes, maybe sometimes 00:11:49 it's a bit like that, it just makes 00:11:50 a so-called sourceut. A 00:11:54 source nut is exactly that. All 00:11:56 packages that come in here now 00:11:57 also zip to their destination. 00:11:59 We can also hang a PC behind here 00:12:00 . This even affects the PC. 00:12:04 The PC even responds to that. No 00:12:08 problem. The problem, however, is 00:12:11 that the Fritzbox now goes there, and with 00:12:13 the response packet that comes back to the box 00:12:14 , which is supposed to go out through the VPN tunnel 00:12:16 , the Fritzbox says: "Yes, 00:12:19 yes, I know, no problem. I'll send 00:12:21 the data packet out too." We can see it 00:12:23 here in the Wehark, but it's just doing 00:12:26 a source nut. This means that it changes the 00:12:30 data packet in the source area, i.e., 00:12:33 where the IP address comes from, no 00:12:36 longer from 178. With the 00:12:38 source, it changes the IP address from its 00:12:40 IP address in the tunnel network. That's 00:12:43 what we ultimately 00:12:45 see here: 10,702. 00:12:48 The response packet no longer comes from 00:12:50 where we want it to come from. This 00:12:53 means that in this construct, as we 00:12:56 actually want it, we 00:12:57 want to access something behind 00:13:00 this Fritzbox from the outside, say, 00:13:03 simple TCP sessions, 00:13:06 no, I don't want that, because the 00:13:09 response packet doesn't come from where I 00:13:11 sent it. Well, and I ca 00:13:14 n't explain it any better, because 00:13:15 that's what the problem here is. 00:13:17 caused, right? It doesn't 00:13:19 matter whether I only query point 1 00:13:20 or the PCs behind it 00:13:23 . The problem can no 00:13:25 longer be solved this way, because this box here 00:13:28 simply creates a source nut. There are two 00:13:31 possible solutions from my point of view, and 00:13:33 I don't want to show you them now, because 00:13:34 I want to present a solution 00:13:36 as a separate video after this video 00:13:38 , because it doesn't make sense to do it 00:13:39 here. So 00:13:41 we'll do the whole thing theoretically now. 00:13:43 The problem should be clear to you now. 00:13:44 This little box is a small beep 00:13:48 and simply changes IP addresses on its 00:13:51 tunnel network. Yes, you could think that's 00:13:53 good, but in our case, if 00:13:55 we want to set up a side-to-side, 00:13:56 bad. Theoretically, what can you 00:13:58 do? Well, on the other side of the 00:14:01 tunnel you could go and 00:14:03 work with a source nut, so 00:14:06 that the IP addresses are 00:14:08 somewhat disguised. Who 00:14:10 comes from where with which IP address would work 00:14:12 . But the much better 00:14:14 solution is if you somehow 00:14:16 really have a, let's call it If you 00:14:18 want to do a clean side-to-side connection, 00:14:21 you can continue using the box, 00:14:22 but my top tip is to connect 00:14:25 a Raspberry Pi behind the Fritzbox 00:14:28 , which simply takes over the VPN connection 00:14:30 , because it does 00:14:32 n't do anything like that. It 00:14:34 also routes the data packets that 00:14:36 come in 00:14:39 through the tunnel without any source-nothing. 00:14:42 This means that you simply set up a 00:14:44 route here. Send everything that goes towards 10.7 00:14:46 point something 00:14:48 to the Raspberry Pi, and the Raspberry Pi 00:14:50 then takes over cleanly and well 00:14:52 and then sends the data packets to 00:14:53 my Cloud Gateway. This means that 00:14:56 we only set up one route here. The Pi 00:14:57 takes over the VPN, because this box 00:15:00 , how should I put it, keeps 00:15:02 pretending to be good at VPN, but we 00:15:04 just saw it live. It's 00:15:06 simply a disaster. It 00:15:09 just plays a masquerade, sources 00:15:11 on a port where we simply don't 00:15:13 want it, and we can't configure 00:15:15 anything. Well, what have we 00:15:18 learned again? The egg-laying of the 00:15:19 jack of all trades. If you need something 00:15:20 special I want to do, it's 00:15:22 not that bad again. Yes, I hope 00:15:24 you enjoyed the video. Give me a thumbs 00:15:26 up and a thumbs down 00:15:27 for AVM. T, that's it again. 00:15:30 See you in the next video. Take 00:15:31 care. Bye.
identifier: 4363
model: gemini-2.5-pro| input-price: 1.25 output-price: 10 max-context-length: 200_000
host: 193.8.40.126
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIKBbLPPEZQinclude_comments: None
include_timestamps: 1
include_glossary: None
output_language: en
cost: 0.03129
*Abstract:* This video analyzes a breaking Wall Street Journal report detailing an alleged letter sent by Donald Trump to Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003. The report claims the letter, part of a larger album, contained a drawing of a naked woman and a typewritten note with incriminating phrases like "enigmas never age" and a reference to a shared "wonderful secret." The video examines Trump's vehement denial of the story, his claim that he doesn't draw, and his threat to sue the publication. It then presents corroborating circumstantial evidence, including the fact that other individuals mentioned in the article did not deny their letters, archived proof of the named bookbinder's connection to Epstein, and public records of Trump creating "doodles" for charity. The narrator argues that Trump's recent strange behavior regarding the Epstein files and his call to release grand jury transcripts (a potential distraction from the physical evidence) suggest he is concerned about what the files contain. The video concludes by urging caution against jumping to conclusions, emphasizing the need for the definitive evidence—the letter itself—to be made public. *Analyzing the Explosive Allegations Against Trump* * *0:00:02 The Explosive Allegation:* The Wall Street Journal published a story about a letter Donald Trump allegedly sent to Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003. The letter reportedly featured a drawing of a naked woman and a poem about a "wonderful secret" they shared. * *0:00:43 Trump's Preemptive Behavior:* The video contextualizes the story by highlighting Trump's recent and strange behavior, where he has preemptively dismissed the unreleased Epstein files as "phony stuff" and a "hoax." * *0:02:02 The Letter's Incriminating Content:* The alleged typewritten note within the drawing contains several troubling phrases, including "enigmas never age" and the closing line, "may every day be another wonderful secret." * *0:03:32 Trump's Strong Denial:* In an interview with the Journal, Trump firmly denied writing the letter or drawing the picture, calling it a "fake thing," stating it wasn't his language, and threatening a lawsuit. * *0:05:01 Corroborating Evidence via Others:* While Trump is the only person to issue a firm denial, other individuals mentioned in the WSJ article as having written letters for the same birthday album, such as Alan Dershowitz, gave non-denial responses. * *0:06:36 Contradicting the Denial:* The video presents evidence that Trump has created and donated marker "doodles" for charity auctions in the past, directly contradicting his claim that "I don't draw pictures." This is compared to Prince Andrew's discredited "no sweat" denial. * *0:08:35 The Bookbinder Connection:* A key claim in the WSJ report—that the album was made by bookbinder Herbert Weitz—is corroborated by a 2003 archived version of the bookbinder's website, which lists Jeffrey Epstein as a client. * *0:12:40 A Call for Real Evidence:* In response, Trump has called on his potential AG to release grand jury transcripts. The narrator argues this is a distraction, as the central piece of evidence is the physical letter and album, which would not be in a transcript. * *0:14:51 A Call for Caution and More Proof:* The video concludes by urging viewers not to immediately dismiss or accept the story. While there is significant corroborating circumstantial evidence, the definitive proof—a photo of the letter itself—has not been released by the Wall Street Journal or the DOJ. I used gemini-2.5-pro| input-price: 1.25 output-price: 10 max-context-length: 200_000 on rocketrecap dot com to summarize the transcript. Cost (if I didn't use the free tier): $0.03 Input tokens: 18648 Output tokens: 798
Abstract:
This video analyzes a breaking Wall Street Journal report detailing an alleged letter sent by Donald Trump to Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003. The report claims the letter, part of a larger album, contained a drawing of a naked woman and a typewritten note with incriminating phrases like "enigmas never age" and a reference to a shared "wonderful secret." The video examines Trump's vehement denial of the story, his claim that he doesn't draw, and his threat to sue the publication. It then presents corroborating circumstantial evidence, including the fact that other individuals mentioned in the article did not deny their letters, archived proof of the named bookbinder's connection to Epstein, and public records of Trump creating "doodles" for charity. The narrator argues that Trump's recent strange behavior regarding the Epstein files and his call to release grand jury transcripts (a potential distraction from the physical evidence) suggest he is concerned about what the files contain. The video concludes by urging caution against jumping to conclusions, emphasizing the need for the definitive evidence—the letter itself—to be made public.
Analyzing the Explosive Allegations Against Trump
Below, I will provide input for an example video (comprising of title, description, and transcript, in this order) and the corresponding abstract and summary I expect. Afterward, I will provide a new transcript that I want you to summarize in the same format. **Please give an abstract of the transcript and then summarize the transcript in a self-contained bullet list format.** Include starting timestamps, important details and key takeaways. Example Input: Fluidigm Polaris Part 2- illuminator and camera mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Subscribed 369 Share Download Clip Save 5,857 views Aug 26, 2024 Fluidigm Polaris part 1 : • Fluidigm Polaris (Part 1) - Biotech g... Ebay listings: https://www.ebay.co.uk/usr/mikeselect... Merch https://mikeselectricstuff.creator-sp... Transcript Follow along using the transcript. Show transcript mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Videos About Support on Patreon 40 Comments @robertwatsonbath 6 hours ago Thanks Mike. Ooof! - with the level of bodgery going on around 15:48 I think shame would have made me do a board re spin, out of my own pocket if I had to. 1 Reply @Muonium1 9 hours ago The green LED looks different from the others and uses phosphor conversion because of the "green gap" problem where green InGaN emitters suffer efficiency droop at high currents. Phosphide based emitters don't start becoming efficient until around 600nm so also can't be used for high power green emitters. See the paper and plot by Matthias Auf der Maur in his 2015 paper on alloy fluctuations in InGaN as the cause of reduced external quantum efficiency at longer (green) wavelengths. 4 Reply 1 reply @tafsirnahian669 10 hours ago (edited) Can this be used as an astrophotography camera? Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 6 hours ago Yes, but may need a shutter to avoid light during readout Reply @2010craggy 11 hours ago Narrowband filters we use in Astronomy (Astrophotography) are sided- they work best passing light in one direction so I guess the arrows on the filter frames indicate which way round to install them in the filter wheel. 1 Reply @vitukz 12 hours ago A mate with Channel @extractions&ire could use it 2 Reply @RobertGallop 19 hours ago That LED module says it can go up to 28 amps!!! 21 amps for 100%. You should see what it does at 20 amps! Reply @Prophes0r 19 hours ago I had an "Oh SHIT!" moment when I realized that the weird trapezoidal shape of that light guide was for keystone correction of the light source. Very clever. 6 Reply @OneBiOzZ 20 hours ago given the cost of the CCD you think they could have run another PCB for it 9 Reply @tekvax01 21 hours ago $20 thousand dollars per minute of run time! 1 Reply @tekvax01 22 hours ago "We spared no expense!" John Hammond Jurassic Park. *(that's why this thing costs the same as a 50-seat Greyhound Bus coach!) Reply @florianf4257 22 hours ago The smearing on the image could be due to the fact that you don't use a shutter, so you see brighter stripes under bright areas of the image as you still iluminate these pixels while the sensor data ist shifted out towards the top. I experienced this effect back at university with a LN-Cooled CCD for Spectroscopy. The stripes disapeared as soon as you used the shutter instead of disabling it in the open position (but fokussing at 100ms integration time and continuous readout with a focal plane shutter isn't much fun). 12 Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 12 hours ago I didn't think of that, but makes sense 2 Reply @douro20 22 hours ago (edited) The red LED reminds me of one from Roithner Lasertechnik. I have a Symbol 2D scanner which uses two very bright LEDs from that company, one red and one red-orange. The red-orange is behind a lens which focuses it into an extremely narrow beam. 1 Reply @RicoElectrico 23 hours ago PFG is Pulse Flush Gate according to the datasheet. Reply @dcallan812 23 hours ago Very interesting. 2x Reply @littleboot_ 1 day ago Cool interesting device Reply @dav1dbone 1 day ago I've stripped large projectors, looks similar, wonder if some of those castings are a magnesium alloy? Reply @kevywevvy8833 1 day ago ironic that some of those Phlatlight modules are used in some of the cheapest disco lights. 1 Reply 1 reply @bill6255 1 day ago Great vid - gets right into subject in title, its packed with information, wraps up quickly. Should get a YT award! imho 3 Reply @JAKOB1977 1 day ago (edited) The whole sensor module incl. a 5 grand 50mpix sensor for 49 £.. highest bid atm Though also a limited CCD sensor, but for the right buyer its a steal at these relative low sums. Architecture Full Frame CCD (Square Pixels) Total Number of Pixels 8304 (H) × 6220 (V) = 51.6 Mp Number of Effective Pixels 8208 (H) × 6164 (V) = 50.5 Mp Number of Active Pixels 8176 (H) × 6132 (V) = 50.1 Mp Pixel Size 6.0 m (H) × 6.0 m (V) Active Image Size 49.1 mm (H) × 36.8 mm (V) 61.3 mm (Diagonal), 645 1.1x Optical Format Aspect Ratio 4:3 Horizontal Outputs 4 Saturation Signal 40.3 ke− Output Sensitivity 31 V/e− Quantum Efficiency KAF−50100−CAA KAF−50100−AAA KAF−50100−ABA (with Lens) 22%, 22%, 16% (Peak R, G, B) 25% 62% Read Noise (f = 18 MHz) 12.5 e− Dark Signal (T = 60°C) 42 pA/cm2 Dark Current Doubling Temperature 5.7°C Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 70.2 dB Estimated Linear Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 69.3 dB Charge Transfer Efficiency Horizontal Vertical 0.999995 0.999999 Blooming Protection (4 ms Exposure Time) 800X Saturation Exposure Maximum Date Rate 18 MHz Package Ceramic PGA Cover Glass MAR Coated, 2 Sides or Clear Glass Features • TRUESENSE Transparent Gate Electrode for High Sensitivity • Ultra-High Resolution • Board Dynamic Range • Low Noise Architecture • Large Active Imaging Area Applications • Digitization • Mapping/Aerial • Photography • Scientific Thx for the tear down Mike, always a joy Reply @martinalooksatthings 1 day ago 15:49 that is some great bodging on of caps, they really didn't want to respin that PCB huh 8 Reply @RhythmGamer 1 day ago Was depressed today and then a new mike video dropped and now I’m genuinely happy to get my tear down fix 1 Reply @dine9093 1 day ago (edited) Did you transfrom into Mr Blobby for a moment there? 2 Reply @NickNorton 1 day ago Thanks Mike. Your videos are always interesting. 5 Reply @KeritechElectronics 1 day ago Heavy optics indeed... Spare no expense, cost no object. Splendid build quality. The CCD is a thing of beauty! 1 Reply @YSoreil 1 day ago The pricing on that sensor is about right, I looked in to these many years ago when they were still in production since it's the only large sensor you could actually buy. Really cool to see one in the wild. 2 Reply @snik2pl 1 day ago That leds look like from led projector Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago TDI = Time Domain Integration ? 1 Reply @wolpumba4099 1 day ago (edited) Maybe the camera should not be illuminated during readout. From the datasheet of the sensor (Onsemi): saturation 40300 electrons, read noise 12.5 electrons per pixel @ 18MHz (quite bad). quantum efficiency 62% (if it has micro lenses), frame rate 1 Hz. lateral overflow drain to prevent blooming protects against 800x (factor increases linearly with exposure time) saturation exposure (32e6 electrons per pixel at 4ms exposure time), microlens has +/- 20 degree acceptance angle i guess it would be good for astrophotography 4 Reply @txm100 1 day ago (edited) Babe wake up a new mikeselectricstuff has dropped! 9 Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago That looks like a finger-lakes filter wheel, however, for astronomy they'd never use such a large stepper. 1 Reply @MRooodddvvv 1 day ago yaaaaay ! more overcomplicated optical stuff ! 4 Reply 1 reply @NoPegs 1 day ago He lives! 11 Reply 1 reply Transcript 0:00 so I've stripped all the bits of the 0:01 optical system so basically we've got 0:03 the uh the camera 0:05 itself which is mounted on this uh very 0:09 complex 0:10 adjustment thing which obviously to set 0:13 you the various tilt and uh alignment 0:15 stuff then there's two of these massive 0:18 lenses I've taken one of these apart I 0:20 think there's something like about eight 0:22 or nine Optical elements in here these 0:25 don't seem to do a great deal in terms 0:26 of electr magnification they're obiously 0:28 just about getting the image to where it 0:29 uh where it needs to be just so that 0:33 goes like that then this Optical block I 0:36 originally thought this was made of some 0:37 s crazy heavy material but it's just 0:39 really the sum of all these Optical bits 0:41 are just ridiculously heavy those lenses 0:43 are about 4 kilos each and then there's 0:45 this very heavy very solid um piece that 0:47 goes in the middle and this is so this 0:49 is the filter wheel assembly with a 0:51 hilariously oversized steper 0:53 motor driving this wheel with these very 0:57 large narrow band filters so we've got 1:00 various different shades of uh 1:03 filters there five Al together that 1:06 one's actually just showing up a silver 1:07 that's actually a a red but fairly low 1:10 transmission orangey red blue green 1:15 there's an excess cover on this side so 1:16 the filters can be accessed and changed 1:19 without taking anything else apart even 1:21 this is like ridiculous it's like solid 1:23 aluminium this is just basically a cover 1:25 the actual wavelengths of these are um 1:27 488 525 570 630 and 700 NM not sure what 1:32 the suffix on that perhaps that's the uh 1:34 the width of the spectral line say these 1:37 are very narrow band filters most of 1:39 them are you very little light through 1:41 so it's still very tight narrow band to 1:43 match the um fluoresence of the dies 1:45 they're using in the biochemical process 1:48 and obviously to reject the light that's 1:49 being fired at it from that Illuminator 1:51 box and then there's a there's a second 1:53 one of these lenses then the actual sort 1:55 of samples below that so uh very serious 1:58 amount of very uh chunky heavy Optics 2:01 okay let's take a look at this light 2:02 source made by company Lumen Dynamics 2:04 who are now part of 2:06 excelitas self-contained unit power 2:08 connector USB and this which one of the 2:11 Cable Bundle said was a TTL interface 2:14 USB wasn't used in uh the fluid 2:17 application output here and I think this 2:19 is an input for um light feedback I 2:21 don't if it's regulated or just a measur 2:23 measurement facility and the uh fiber 2:27 assembly 2:29 Square Inlet there and then there's two 2:32 outputs which have uh lens assemblies 2:35 and this small one which goes back into 2:37 that small Port just Loops out of here 2:40 straight back in So on this side we've 2:42 got the electronics which look pretty 2:44 straightforward we've got a bit of power 2:45 supply stuff over here and we've got 2:48 separate drivers for each wavelength now 2:50 interesting this is clearly been very 2:52 specifically made for this application 2:54 you I was half expecting like say some 2:56 generic drivers that could be used for a 2:58 number of different things but actually 3:00 literally specified the exact wavelength 3:02 on the PCB there is provision here for 3:04 385 NM which isn't populated but this is 3:07 clearly been designed very specifically 3:09 so these four drivers look the same but 3:10 then there's two higher power ones for 3:12 575 and 3:14 520 a slightly bigger heat sink on this 3:16 575 section there a p 24 which is 3:20 providing USB interface USB isolator the 3:23 USB interface just presents as a comport 3:26 I did have a quick look but I didn't 3:27 actually get anything sensible um I did 3:29 dump the Pi code out and there's a few 3:31 you a few sort of commands that you 3:32 could see in text but I didn't actually 3:34 manage to get it working properly I 3:36 found some software for related version 3:38 but it didn't seem to want to talk to it 3:39 but um I say that wasn't used for the 3:41 original application it might be quite 3:42 interesting to get try and get the Run 3:44 hours count out of it and the TTL 3:46 interface looks fairly straightforward 3:48 we've got positions for six opto 3:50 isolators but only five five are 3:52 installed so that corresponds with the 3:54 unused thing so I think this hopefully 3:56 should be as simple as just providing a 3:57 ttrl signal for each color to uh enable 4:00 it a big heat sink here which is there I 4:03 think there's like a big S of metal 4:04 plate through the middle of this that 4:05 all the leads are mounted on the other 4:07 side so this is heat sinking it with a 4:09 air flow from a uh just a fan in here 4:13 obviously don't have the air flow 4:14 anywhere near the Optics so conduction 4:17 cool through to this plate that's then 4:18 uh air cooled got some pots which are 4:21 presumably power 4:22 adjustments okay let's take a look at 4:24 the other side which is uh much more 4:27 interesting see we've got some uh very 4:31 uh neatly Twisted cable assemblies there 4:35 a bunch of leads so we've got one here 4:37 475 up here 430 NM 630 575 and 520 4:44 filters and dcro mirrors a quick way to 4:48 see what's white is if we just shine 4:49 some white light through 4:51 here not sure how it is is to see on the 4:54 camera but shining white light we do 4:55 actually get a bit of red a bit of blue 4:57 some yellow here so the obstacle path 5:00 575 it goes sort of here bounces off 5:03 this mirror and goes out the 520 goes 5:07 sort of down here across here and up 5:09 there 630 goes basically straight 5:13 through 5:15 430 goes across there down there along 5:17 there and the 475 goes down here and 5:20 left this is the light sensing thing 5:22 think here there's just a um I think 5:24 there a photo diode or other sensor 5:26 haven't actually taken that off and 5:28 everything's fixed down to this chunk of 5:31 aluminium which acts as the heat 5:32 spreader that then conducts the heat to 5:33 the back side for the heat 5:35 sink and the actual lead packages all 5:38 look fairly similar except for this one 5:41 on the 575 which looks quite a bit more 5:44 substantial big spay 5:46 Terminals and the interface for this 5:48 turned out to be extremely simple it's 5:50 literally a 5V TTL level to enable each 5:54 color doesn't seem to be any tensity 5:56 control but there are some additional 5:58 pins on that connector that weren't used 5:59 in the through time thing so maybe 6:01 there's some extra lines that control 6:02 that I couldn't find any data on this uh 6:05 unit and the um their current product 6:07 range is quite significantly different 6:09 so we've got the uh blue these 6:13 might may well be saturating the camera 6:16 so they might look a bit weird so that's 6:17 the 430 6:18 blue the 575 6:24 yellow uh 6:26 475 light blue 6:29 the uh 520 6:31 green and the uh 630 red now one 6:36 interesting thing I noticed for the 6:39 575 it's actually it's actually using a 6:42 white lead and then filtering it rather 6:44 than using all the other ones are using 6:46 leads which are the fundamental colors 6:47 but uh this is actually doing white and 6:50 it's a combination of this filter and 6:52 the dichroic mirrors that are turning to 6:55 Yellow if we take the filter out and a 6:57 lot of the a lot of the um blue content 7:00 is going this way the red is going 7:02 straight through these two mirrors so 7:05 this is clearly not reflecting much of 7:08 that so we end up with the yellow coming 7:10 out of uh out of there which is a fairly 7:14 light yellow color which you don't 7:16 really see from high intensity leads so 7:19 that's clearly why they've used the 7:20 white to uh do this power consumption of 7:23 the white is pretty high so going up to 7:25 about 2 and 1 half amps on that color 7:27 whereas most of the other colors are 7:28 only drawing half an amp or so at 24 7:30 volts the uh the green is up to about 7:32 1.2 but say this thing is uh much 7:35 brighter and if you actually run all the 7:38 colors at the same time you get a fairly 7:41 reasonable um looking white coming out 7:43 of it and one thing you might just be 7:45 out to notice is there is some sort 7:46 color banding around here that's not 7:49 getting uh everything s completely 7:51 concentric and I think that's where this 7:53 fiber optic thing comes 7:58 in I'll 8:00 get a couple of Fairly accurately shaped 8:04 very sort of uniform color and looking 8:06 at What's um inside here we've basically 8:09 just got this Square Rod so this is 8:12 clearly yeah the lights just bouncing 8:13 off all the all the various sides to um 8:16 get a nice uniform illumination uh this 8:19 back bit looks like it's all potted so 8:21 nothing I really do to get in there I 8:24 think this is fiber so I have come 8:26 across um cables like this which are 8:27 liquid fill but just looking through the 8:30 end of this it's probably a bit hard to 8:31 see it does look like there fiber ends 8:34 going going on there and so there's this 8:36 feedback thing which is just obviously 8:39 compensating for the any light losses 8:41 through here to get an accurate 8:43 representation of uh the light that's 8:45 been launched out of these two 8:47 fibers and you see uh 8:49 these have got this sort of trapezium 8:54 shape light guides again it's like a 8:56 sort of acrylic or glass light guide 9:00 guess projected just to make the right 9:03 rectangular 9:04 shape and look at this Center assembly 9:07 um the light output doesn't uh change 9:10 whether you feed this in or not so it's 9:11 clear not doing any internal Clos Loop 9:14 control obviously there may well be some 9:16 facility for it to do that but it's not 9:17 being used in this 9:19 application and so this output just 9:21 produces a voltage on the uh outle 9:24 connector proportional to the amount of 9:26 light that's present so there's a little 9:28 diffuser in the back there 9:30 and then there's just some kind of uh 9:33 Optical sensor looks like a 9:35 chip looking at the lead it's a very 9:37 small package on the PCB with this lens 9:40 assembly over the top and these look 9:43 like they're actually on a copper 9:44 Metalized PCB for maximum thermal 9:47 performance and yeah it's a very small 9:49 package looks like it's a ceramic 9:51 package and there's a thermister there 9:53 for temperature monitoring this is the 9:56 475 blue one this is the 520 need to 9:59 Green which is uh rather different OB 10:02 it's a much bigger D with lots of bond 10:04 wise but also this looks like it's using 10:05 a phosphor if I shine a blue light at it 10:08 lights up green so this is actually a 10:10 phosphor conversion green lead which 10:12 I've I've come across before they want 10:15 that specific wavelength so they may be 10:17 easier to tune a phosphor than tune the 10:20 um semiconductor material to get the uh 10:23 right right wavelength from the lead 10:24 directly uh red 630 similar size to the 10:28 blue one or does seem to have a uh a 10:31 lens on top of it there is a sort of red 10:33 coloring to 10:35 the die but that doesn't appear to be 10:38 fluorescent as far as I can 10:39 tell and the white one again a little 10:41 bit different sort of much higher 10:43 current 10:46 connectors a makeer name on that 10:48 connector flot light not sure if that's 10:52 the connector or the lead 10:54 itself and obviously with the phosphor 10:56 and I'd imagine that phosphor may well 10:58 be tuned to get the maximum to the uh 5 11:01 cenm and actually this white one looks 11:04 like a St fairly standard product I just 11:06 found it in Mouse made by luminous 11:09 devices in fact actually I think all 11:11 these are based on various luminous 11:13 devices modules and they're you take 11:17 looks like they taking the nearest 11:18 wavelength and then just using these 11:19 filters to clean it up to get a precise 11:22 uh spectral line out of it so quite a 11:25 nice neat and um extreme 11:30 bright light source uh sure I've got any 11:33 particular use for it so I think this 11:35 might end up on 11:36 eBay but uh very pretty to look out and 11:40 without the uh risk of burning your eyes 11:43 out like you do with lasers so I thought 11:45 it would be interesting to try and 11:46 figure out the runtime of this things 11:48 like this we usually keep some sort 11:49 record of runtime cuz leads degrade over 11:51 time I couldn't get any software to work 11:52 through the USB face but then had a 11:54 thought probably going to be writing the 11:55 runtime periodically to the e s prom so 11:58 I just just scope up that and noticed it 12:00 was doing right every 5 minutes so I 12:02 just ran it for a while periodically 12:04 reading the E squ I just held the pick 12:05 in in reset and um put clip over to read 12:07 the square prom and found it was writing 12:10 one location per color every 5 minutes 12:12 so if one color was on it would write 12:14 that location every 5 minutes and just 12:16 increment it by one so after doing a few 12:18 tests with different colors of different 12:19 time periods it looked extremely 12:21 straightforward it's like a four bite 12:22 count for each color looking at the 12:24 original data that was in it all the 12:26 colors apart from Green were reading 12:28 zero and the green was reading four 12:30 indicating a total 20 minutes run time 12:32 ever if it was turned on run for a short 12:34 time then turned off that might not have 12:36 been counted but even so indicates this 12:37 thing wasn't used a great deal the whole 12:40 s process of doing a run can be several 12:42 hours but it'll only be doing probably 12:43 the Imaging at the end of that so you 12:46 wouldn't expect to be running for a long 12:47 time but say a single color for 20 12:50 minutes over its whole lifetime does 12:52 seem a little bit on the low side okay 12:55 let's look at the camera un fortunately 12:57 I managed to not record any sound when I 12:58 did this it's also a couple of months 13:00 ago so there's going to be a few details 13:02 that I've forgotten so I'm just going to 13:04 dub this over the original footage so um 13:07 take the lid off see this massive great 13:10 heat sink so this is a pel cool camera 13:12 we've got this blower fan producing a 13:14 fair amount of air flow through 13:16 it the connector here there's the ccds 13:19 mounted on the board on the 13:24 right this unplugs so we've got a bit of 13:27 power supply stuff on here 13:29 USB interface I think that's the Cyprus 13:32 microcontroller High speeded USB 13:34 interface there's a zyink spon fpga some 13:40 RAM and there's a couple of ATD 13:42 converters can't quite read what those 13:45 those are but anal 13:47 devices um little bit of bodgery around 13:51 here extra decoupling obviously they 13:53 have having some noise issues this is 13:55 around the ram chip quite a lot of extra 13:57 capacitors been added there 13:59 uh there's a couple of amplifiers prior 14:01 to the HD converter buffers or Andor 14:05 amplifiers taking the CCD 14:08 signal um bit more power spy stuff here 14:11 this is probably all to do with 14:12 generating the various CCD bias voltages 14:14 they uh need quite a lot of exotic 14:18 voltages next board down is just a 14:20 shield and an interconnect 14:24 boardly shielding the power supply stuff 14:26 from some the more sensitive an log 14:28 stuff 14:31 and this is the bottom board which is 14:32 just all power supply 14:34 stuff as you can see tons of capacitors 14:37 or Transformer in 14:42 there and this is the CCD which is a uh 14:47 very impressive thing this is a kf50 100 14:50 originally by true sense then codec 14:53 there ON 14:54 Semiconductor it's 50 megapixels uh the 14:58 only price I could find was this one 15:00 5,000 bucks and the architecture you can 15:03 see there actually two separate halves 15:04 which explains the Dual AZ converters 15:06 and two amplifiers it's literally split 15:08 down the middle and duplicated so it's 15:10 outputting two streams in parallel just 15:13 to keep the bandwidth sensible and it's 15:15 got this amazing um diffraction effects 15:18 it's got micro lenses over the pixel so 15:20 there's there's a bit more Optics going 15:22 on than on a normal 15:25 sensor few more bodges on the CCD board 15:28 including this wire which isn't really 15:29 tacked down very well which is a bit uh 15:32 bit of a mess quite a few bits around 15:34 this board where they've uh tacked 15:36 various bits on which is not super 15:38 impressive looks like CCD drivers on the 15:40 left with those 3 ohm um damping 15:43 resistors on the 15:47 output get a few more little bodges 15:50 around here some of 15:52 the and there's this separator the 15:54 silica gel to keep the moisture down but 15:56 there's this separator that actually 15:58 appears to be cut from piece of 15:59 antistatic 16:04 bag and this sort of thermal block on 16:06 top of this stack of three pel Cola 16:12 modules so as with any Stacks they get 16:16 um larger as they go back towards the 16:18 heat sink because each P's got to not 16:20 only take the heat from the previous but 16:21 also the waste heat which is quite 16:27 significant you see a little temperature 16:29 sensor here that copper block which 16:32 makes contact with the back of the 16:37 CCD and this's the back of the 16:40 pelas this then contacts the heat sink 16:44 on the uh rear there a few thermal pads 16:46 as well for some of the other power 16:47 components on this 16:51 PCB okay I've connected this uh camera 16:54 up I found some drivers on the disc that 16:56 seem to work under Windows 7 couldn't 16:58 get to install under Windows 11 though 17:01 um in the absence of any sort of lens or 17:03 being bothered to the proper amount I've 17:04 just put some f over it and put a little 17:06 pin in there to make a pinhole lens and 17:08 software gives a few options I'm not 17:11 entirely sure what all these are there's 17:12 obviously a clock frequency 22 MHz low 17:15 gain and with PFG no idea what that is 17:19 something something game programmable 17:20 Something game perhaps ver exposure 17:23 types I think focus is just like a 17:25 continuous grab until you tell it to 17:27 stop not entirely sure all these options 17:30 are obviously exposure time uh triggers 17:33 there ex external hardware trigger inut 17:35 you just trigger using a um thing on 17:37 screen so the resolution is 8176 by 17:40 6132 and you can actually bin those 17:42 where you combine multiple pixels to get 17:46 increased gain at the expense of lower 17:48 resolution down this is a 10sec exposure 17:51 obviously of the pin hole it's very uh 17:53 intensitive so we just stand still now 17:56 downloading it there's the uh exposure 17:59 so when it's 18:01 um there's a little status thing down 18:03 here so that tells you the um exposure 18:07 [Applause] 18:09 time it's this is just it 18:15 downloading um it is quite I'm seeing 18:18 quite a lot like smearing I think that I 18:20 don't know whether that's just due to 18:21 pixels overloading or something else I 18:24 mean yeah it's not it's not um out of 18:26 the question that there's something not 18:27 totally right about this camera 18:28 certainly was bodge wise on there um I 18:31 don't I'd imagine a camera like this 18:32 it's got a fairly narrow range of 18:34 intensities that it's happy with I'm not 18:36 going to spend a great deal of time on 18:38 this if you're interested in this camera 18:40 maybe for astronomy or something and 18:42 happy to sort of take the risk of it may 18:44 not be uh perfect I'll um I think I'll 18:47 stick this on eBay along with the 18:48 Illuminator I'll put a link down in the 18:50 description to the listing take your 18:52 chances to grab a bargain so for example 18:54 here we see this vertical streaking so 18:56 I'm not sure how normal that is this is 18:58 on fairly bright scene looking out the 19:02 window if I cut the exposure time down 19:04 on that it's now 1 second 19:07 exposure again most of the image 19:09 disappears again this is looks like it's 19:11 possibly over still overloading here go 19:14 that go down to say say quarter a 19:16 second so again I think there might be 19:19 some Auto gain control going on here um 19:21 this is with the PFG option let's try 19:23 turning that off and see what 19:25 happens so I'm not sure this is actually 19:27 more streaking or which just it's 19:29 cranked up the gain all the dis display 19:31 gray scale to show what um you know the 19:33 range of things that it's captured 19:36 there's one of one of 12 things in the 19:38 software there's um you can see of you 19:40 can't seem to read out the temperature 19:42 of the pelta cooler but you can set the 19:44 temperature and if you said it's a 19:46 different temperature you see the power 19:48 consumption jump up running the cooler 19:50 to get the temperature you requested but 19:52 I can't see anything anywhere that tells 19:54 you whether the cool is at the at the 19:56 temperature other than the power 19:57 consumption going down and there's no 19:59 temperature read out 20:03 here and just some yeah this is just 20:05 sort of very basic software I'm sure 20:07 there's like an API for more 20:09 sophisticated 20:10 applications but so if you know anything 20:12 more about these cameras please um stick 20:14 in the 20:15 comments um incidentally when I was 20:18 editing I didn't notice there was a bent 20:19 pin on the um CCD but I did fix that 20:22 before doing these tests and also 20:24 reactivated the um silica gel desicant 20:26 cuz I noticed it was uh I was getting 20:28 bit of condensation on the window but um 20:31 yeah so a couple of uh interesting but 20:34 maybe not particularly uh useful pieces 20:37 of Kit except for someone that's got a 20:38 very specific use so um I'll stick a 20:42 I'll stick these on eBay put a link in 20:44 the description and say hopefully 20:45 someone could actually make some uh good 20:47 use of these things Example Output: **Abstract:** This video presents Part 2 of a teardown focusing on the optical components of a Fluidigm Polaris biotechnology instrument, specifically the multi-wavelength illuminator and the high-resolution CCD camera. The Lumen Dynamics illuminator unit is examined in detail, revealing its construction using multiple high-power LEDs (430nm, 475nm, 520nm, 575nm, 630nm) combined via dichroic mirrors and filters. A square fiber optic rod is used to homogenize the light. A notable finding is the use of a phosphor-converted white LED filtered to achieve the 575nm output. The unit features simple TTL activation for each color, conduction cooling, and internal homogenization optics. Analysis of its EEPROM suggests extremely low operational runtime. The camera module teardown showcases a 50 Megapixel ON Semiconductor KAF-50100 CCD sensor with micro-lenses, cooled by a multi-stage Peltier stack. The control electronics include an FPGA and a USB interface. Significant post-manufacturing modifications ("bodges") are observed on the camera's circuit boards. Basic functional testing using vendor software and a pinhole lens confirms image capture but reveals prominent vertical streaking artifacts, the cause of which remains uncertain (potential overload, readout artifact, or fault). **Exploring the Fluidigm Polaris: A Detailed Look at its High-End Optics and Camera System** * **0:00 High-End Optics:** The system utilizes heavy, high-quality lenses and mirrors for precise imaging, weighing around 4 kilos each. * **0:49 Narrow Band Filters:** A filter wheel with five narrow band filters (488, 525, 570, 630, and 700 nm) ensures accurate fluorescence detection and rejection of excitation light. * **2:01 Customizable Illumination:** The Lumen Dynamics light source offers five individually controllable LED wavelengths (430, 475, 520, 575, 630 nm) with varying power outputs. The 575nm yellow LED is uniquely achieved using a white LED with filtering. * **3:45 TTL Control:** The light source is controlled via a simple TTL interface, enabling easy on/off switching for each LED color. * **12:55 Sophisticated Camera:** The system includes a 50-megapixel Kodak KAI-50100 CCD camera with a Peltier cooling system for reduced noise. * **14:54 High-Speed Data Transfer:** The camera features dual analog-to-digital converters to manage the high data throughput of the 50-megapixel sensor, which is effectively two 25-megapixel sensors operating in parallel. * **18:11 Possible Issues:** The video creator noted some potential issues with the camera, including image smearing. * **18:11 Limited Dynamic Range:** The camera's sensor has a limited dynamic range, making it potentially challenging to capture scenes with a wide range of brightness levels. * **11:45 Low Runtime:** Internal data suggests the system has seen minimal usage, with only 20 minutes of recorded runtime for the green LED. * **20:38 Availability on eBay:** Both the illuminator and camera are expected to be listed for sale on eBay. Here is the real transcript. Please summarize it: 00:00:02 It's all coming out today. The Wall 00:00:02 Street Journal not only released an 00:00:03 article today they're getting sued as 00:00:04 well for this article about Donald 00:00:06 Trump's connection to Jeffrey Epstein. 00:00:08 It's explosive. It's about a letter 00:00:10 Trump sent to Epstein with supposedly a 00:00:13 drawing of a naked woman by Trump along 00:00:17 with a little poem which talks about a 00:00:19 wonderful secret that Jeffrey Epstein 00:00:21 and Trump share. We will go through all 00:00:23 the evidence because there's a lot to 00:00:25 this. You are very silly if you jump to 00:00:28 conclusions on a story this big with 00:00:31 this wide of implications. Let's set the 00:00:34 stage because we're going to take our 00:00:35 time going through this. The president's 00:00:37 behavior during the runup to this 00:00:40 Epstein file leak has been absolutely 00:00:43 strange. 00:00:43 Are you still talking about Jeffrey 00:00:45 Epstein? 00:00:46 It's pretty boring stuff. It's sorted 00:00:48 but it's boring. 00:00:49 You don't want to affect people's lives 00:00:50 if it's phony stuff in there cuz it's a 00:00:52 lot of phony stuff. You know, these 00:00:54 files were made up by Comey. They were 00:00:56 made up by Obama. 00:00:57 Even his supporters are like, "Well, why 00:01:00 is he acting this way? It's so weird. 00:01:02 All of a sudden, it goes from the files 00:01:04 exist to they don't exist to they're a 00:01:06 hoax actually, and there's a bunch of 00:01:08 phony stuff in there." This article, if 00:01:12 true, explains a lot of the strange 00:01:15 behavior. And we don't know if there's 00:01:17 more that's going to come out, if this 00:01:19 is all there is. But I'm going to go 00:01:20 through the main allegation, and I will 00:01:21 call it an allegation because Trump is 00:01:23 definitely going to sue over this. He's 00:01:25 already said as much. So, here's 00:01:27 basically the story. Supposedly, Gizlain 00:01:29 Maxwell collected letters from Trump and 00:01:32 dozens of Epstein's associates for a 00:01:34 2003 birthday album. It was for his 50th 00:01:37 birthday. Pages from the leatherbound 00:01:39 album assembled before Epste was first 00:01:40 arrested are among the documents 00:01:42 examined by the Department of Justice 00:01:44 officials. So there are birthday letters 00:01:46 to Epstein that supposedly have been 00:01:48 seen by the DOJ. They have them in their 00:01:51 files. And the one from Trump supposedly 00:01:54 has a naked woman which appears to be 00:01:56 handdrawn with a heavy marker. And the 00:01:58 future president's signature is a 00:02:00 squiggly Donald below her waist. The 00:02:02 Wall Street Journal goes on to say, 00:02:03 "It's not clear how the letter with 00:02:05 Trump's signature was prepared inside 00:02:07 the outline of the naked woman was a 00:02:08 typewritten note stopped as an imaginary 00:02:10 conversation between Trump and Epstein." 00:02:12 Voiceover, there's more to life than 00:02:14 having everything. Donald, yes, there 00:02:17 is, but I won't tell you what it is. 00:02:19 Jeffrey, nor will I since I also know 00:02:21 what it is. Donald, we have certain 00:02:24 things in common, Jeffrey. Yes, we do. 00:02:26 Come to think of it, enigmas never age. 00:02:29 Have you noticed that? As a matter of 00:02:31 fact, it was clear to me the last time I 00:02:33 saw you. And the final line is, "A pal 00:02:35 is a wonderful thing. Happy birthday, 00:02:37 and may every day be another wonderful 00:02:40 secret." Obviously, that is an insane 00:02:42 thing to write to what later would be 00:02:45 found out to be one of the world's most 00:02:46 prolific. 00:02:48 But there's also two lines in there 00:02:50 which are horrendous. One, enigmas never 00:02:54 age. That's just a strange line. It's a 00:02:57 very incriminating sounding line. We 00:02:59 don't know what it means exactly. And 00:03:00 then also we see may every day be 00:03:02 another wonderful secret. Of course, 00:03:05 this all written inside the outline of a 00:03:07 naked woman uh kind of tells you what 00:03:10 secret they may be talking about there. 00:03:12 Now, we're going to go over Trump's 00:03:14 response and then of course all the 00:03:16 evidence, all the denials, what you may 00:03:19 want to know before making up your mind. 00:03:21 Like I said, this is not a story where 00:03:23 you're going to want to snap to 00:03:24 judgment. Even now, I I'm still I think 00:03:27 there's still a lot we need to see. But 00:03:30 I want to go over Trump's response. He 00:03:32 gave an interview with the Journal on 00:03:34 Tuesday evening, and he denied writing 00:03:36 the letter or drawing the picture. 00:03:37 Quote, "This is not me. This is a fake 00:03:38 thing. It's a fake Wall Street Journal 00:03:40 story. I never wrote a picture in my 00:03:43 life. I don't draw pictures of women." 00:03:45 He said, "It's not my language. It's not 00:03:47 my words." He told the journal he was 00:03:49 preparing to file a lawsuit if it 00:03:50 published the article. I'm going to sue 00:03:51 the Wall Street Journal just like I sued 00:03:53 everyone else. What do we make of this? 00:03:55 Before we jump into the evidence, before 00:03:56 we jump into all the reactions, both 00:03:59 public and of the people involved, let's 00:04:01 just talk about what this could mean. 00:04:04 The denial puts Trump in a very 00:04:06 particular position because if it later 00:04:09 comes out and turns out to be true, it's 00:04:12 worth saying the Wall Street Journal did 00:04:13 not publish a photo of the letter, which 00:04:16 everyone's been asking for. There are a 00:04:18 lot of reasons not to publish it. Maybe 00:04:19 your source didn't allow it, but that's 00:04:22 a huge part that could come out that 00:04:24 changes the whole landscape of this, 00:04:25 right? If it comes out, it's very 00:04:28 devastating because you wouldn't lie 00:04:30 about something like this if you thought 00:04:32 it was no big deal, right? The denial 00:04:34 actually implies a lot of bad things 00:04:37 about what the letter could mean. If you 00:04:40 weren't worried about a story like this, 00:04:42 if you thought the letter was a, you 00:04:43 know, nothing, you wouldn't deny it. You 00:04:45 would just give no comment. You 00:04:47 certainly wouldn't give an interview. 00:04:48 So, now we're going to talk about the 00:04:49 reactions of the people involved because 00:04:51 it's worth saying Trump is not the only 00:04:54 letter mentioned in here. And I think 00:04:55 that's really important because in a 00:04:57 story like this, you want to look to 00:04:58 what could be corroborating evidence. 00:05:01 So, Alan Derswitz is cited in the piece 00:05:04 having written a letter that included a 00:05:06 mockup of a vanity unfair magazine with 00:05:09 mock headlines of who was Jack the 00:05:11 Ripper? Was it Jeffrey Epstein? Allen, a 00:05:14 former lawyer for Epstein, does not deny 00:05:16 this. He says, "It's been a long time 00:05:18 and I don't recall the content of what I 00:05:20 may have written." Lex Wexner also 00:05:22 supposedly had a letter in there. He 00:05:23 declined a comment. Supposedly, his 00:05:25 letter was, "I wanted to get you what 00:05:27 you want." So, here it is. After the 00:05:28 text was a line drawing of what appeared 00:05:30 to be a woman's breast. And then we have 00:05:32 a former assistant who was not cited who 00:05:35 sent Jeffrey a letter. Oh, Jeffrey of 00:05:37 Jeffrey. Everyone loves you. Fun in the 00:05:39 sun. Fun just for fun. Pretty innocuous. 00:05:42 And then of course we have Donald Trump 00:05:44 who denies of course the whole thing. So 00:05:47 we have some non-denials, some people 00:05:49 who just didn't respond. And then we 00:05:51 have Trump. Trump's the only one who's 00:05:52 firmly denying this letter so far with 00:05:55 him doubling down on Truth Social saying 00:05:57 it's not my words. It's not the way I 00:05:59 talk. Also, I don't draw pictures. I 00:06:02 told Rupert Murdoch it was a scam and he 00:06:04 shouldn't print this fake story, but he 00:06:05 did. And now I'm going to sue him in his 00:06:07 third rate newspaper. Now, a couple 00:06:09 comments quick on that one. The Wall 00:06:12 Street Journal is not a third-rate 00:06:13 newspaper. It's also not a super 00:06:15 left-leaning newspaper. Not that that 00:06:18 should matter in journalism, but I know 00:06:20 people's media literacy, that stuff kind 00:06:22 of does kind of tip off their signals. 00:06:24 It's unlikely they're going to publish 00:06:26 something they know they're going to get 00:06:27 sued for unless they have something. And 00:06:30 so, here's where I want to talk about a 00:06:32 little bit of the circumstantial stuff. 00:06:34 So, Trump obviously states, "I don't 00:06:36 draw pictures." But turns out 00:06:40 that's kind of not true. So in a book 00:06:42 called Never Give Up, Trump wrote, "Each 00:06:45 year I donate an autograph doodle to the 00:06:47 Doodle for Hunger auction at Tavern on 00:06:50 the Green. It's a great event." And sure 00:06:51 enough, publicly you can find several 00:06:53 doodles that Donald Trump has done. Most 00:06:56 of these are of skylines, architecture. 00:06:59 None of these are of women. Still, it's 00:07:02 strange to say I don't draw pictures 00:07:04 when you very clearly draw pictures and 00:07:06 they appear to be in thick marker, which 00:07:08 is what you were accused of drawing them 00:07:10 in. Now, none of that means anything, 00:07:12 but it just reminds me a little bit of 00:07:14 the Prince Andrew denial. I don't know 00:07:17 if you guys remember the sweat denial. A 00:07:19 big part of the interview with Prince 00:07:21 Andrew was the denial that he couldn't 00:07:24 have done anything bad because he 00:07:26 couldn't sweat. So this supposedly 00:07:28 falsified Virginia Guprey's whole story. 00:07:31 I I I 00:07:33 have a peculiar medical condition which 00:07:36 is that I don't sweat um or I didn't 00:07:39 sweat at the time. 00:07:40 So yeah, that was kind of this claim 00:07:42 like, hey, this couldn't be true because 00:07:44 I don't do X, but actually we see that 00:07:47 Prince Andrew actually does sweat. And 00:07:50 in the same way, it's not perfect proof, 00:07:53 but you really shouldn't say you don't 00:07:55 draw pictures when being accused of 00:07:57 drawing thick black marker pictures when 00:08:00 uh you definitely draw pictures 00:08:02 sometimes. I mean, it's just and it's 00:08:04 public. I mean, that that's just kind of 00:08:06 a just an obvious devastating hole in 00:08:10 your whole argument. Now, again, I've 00:08:13 got to say like it this is just the 00:08:15 basics. We do not have the letter, okay? 00:08:18 I'm relying on the Wall Street Journal's 00:08:20 reporting on this and we're 00:08:21 corroborating with different pieces of 00:08:24 public evidence. Ultimately, we need to 00:08:26 see if this was actually in the Epstein 00:08:29 files. But there are some other stuff 00:08:31 too that we can look to to corroborate 00:08:33 this story. So, we can look at the 00:08:35 bookbinder. So, in the Wall Street 00:08:37 Journal report, we see a very specific 00:08:39 and interesting corroboration. It says 00:08:41 the book was put together by the New 00:08:43 York City bookbinder Herbert Whites. 00:08:45 According to people involved with the 00:08:46 process, Whites listed Epstein as a 00:08:49 client on his website in 2003. So here 00:08:52 we have a chance to corroborate 00:08:54 externally. Of course, it's not a full 00:08:56 corroboration, but we have a chance to 00:08:58 look to see was it actually on his 00:09:00 website. Right? So if we go to the 00:09:03 archive, we see in 2003 at 00:09:05 whitesman.com, 00:09:07 we see a client list and we see Jeffrey 00:09:10 Epstein is listed on it with a different 00:09:12 spelling of Jeffrey, I should note. And 00:09:15 this says people for whom we have bound 00:09:16 up books and albums. This is another 00:09:19 piece of circumstantial evidence that 00:09:22 makes it hard to believe. It's just 00:09:23 fully made up. Now, you can believe 00:09:26 something in the middle. You can believe 00:09:28 that the letter exists and the Wall 00:09:30 Street Journal saw it and somebody 00:09:32 invented it, right? Like there are a lot 00:09:34 of options here, but the idea that okay, 00:09:37 it the Wall Street Journal is just fully 00:09:39 inventing this story. They're releasing 00:09:41 something with literally no evidence. 00:09:43 They're just fabricating it all. But 00:09:45 citing all these different people, 00:09:47 citing third party stuff that you can 00:09:49 fact check publicly, that's a piece of 00:09:52 evidence to think about. Now, we're 00:09:53 going to talk about the public reactions 00:09:55 to this. We have Caroline Levit, the 00:09:57 press secretary, saying, "The Wall 00:09:59 Street Journal published a hatchet job 00:10:00 with a fake birthday letter that's 00:10:02 supposedly from 2003. This is like the 00:10:05 steel dossier that kickstarted the 00:10:06 Russia Russia hoax all over again. The 00:10:08 Wall Street Journal refused to show us 00:10:09 the letter and conceded they don't even 00:10:10 have it in their possession when we 00:10:12 asked them to verify the alleged 00:10:13 document they're basing their entire 00:10:15 fake story on." Then you have Dan Walin 00:10:18 saying, "The amount of people who think 00:10:19 publications, the scope of the Wall 00:10:20 Street Journal, just put explosive stuff 00:10:22 out about a public figure without 00:10:24 wellestablished authentication 00:10:25 procedures and running it through a team 00:10:27 of lawyers know literally nothing about 00:10:29 journalism." Charlie Kirk says, "This is 00:10:31 not how Trump talks at all. I don't 00:10:34 believe it." Referring to the actual 00:10:36 letter's contents. Specifically, people 00:10:38 picked up on the idea that Trump says 00:10:40 enigma in the writing of it. in fact 00:10:43 Trump writing at all. Some people find 00:10:45 that hard to believe. JD Vance says, 00:10:47 "Forgive my language, but this story is 00:10:49 complete and utter bull." The Wall 00:10:51 Street Journal should be ashamed of 00:10:52 publishing it. Where is the letter? 00:10:53 Would you be shocked to learn they never 00:10:55 showed it to us before publishing it? 00:10:56 Does anyone honestly believe this sounds 00:10:57 like Donald Trump? Of course, then you 00:10:59 have a response to that where somebody 00:11:01 says, "Carson's an enigma to me." This 00:11:04 is clearly debunking the idea that the 00:11:06 word enigma is not in Trump's 00:11:08 vocabulary. 00:11:10 Now, Carson's an enigma to me. So that 00:11:12 clearly debunks the idea that he 00:11:13 couldn't have written this because 00:11:14 enigma wasn't in his vocabulary. It 00:11:17 actually is. So from where I'm sitting, 00:11:19 the letter is odd, but it also is in 00:11:22 line with some of these other letters 00:11:24 from people like Lex Wexner. It's also 00:11:27 in line with some of the doodles that 00:11:30 Trump has publicly made. And it is also 00:11:32 in line with Trump's recent odd behavior 00:11:35 with the Epstein files where he keeps 00:11:37 setting up the idea that there's this 00:11:39 big hoax coming that there's phony stuff 00:11:42 in there. And that actually is the most 00:11:45 persuasive piece of evidence Trump's own 00:11:47 behavior in this weird meltdown more 00:11:50 than anything which has convinced me 00:11:52 because on the one hand there are some 00:11:54 things which would tilt in the favor of 00:11:56 it not being Trump, right? The very fact 00:11:59 that it's a letter. the pros of the 00:12:02 letter is a bit strange and then you 00:12:05 also have the fact that okay if the DOJ 00:12:07 had this during the Biden years why 00:12:10 didn't it come out right so that's all 00:12:12 pretty compelling until you once again 00:12:15 just look at the way Trump has been 00:12:17 behaving I think it strongly suggests 00:12:19 that Trump saw something in the Epstein 00:12:21 files was debriefed on something that he 00:12:24 was worried about whether it was this 00:12:26 letter or something else I don't know 00:12:28 but clearly there's something in those 00:12:30 files that he was concerned about being 00:12:32 involved with. I think we need a full 00:12:35 declassification of these files except 00:12:37 for the CSAM and victims. Now to the 00:12:40 declassifying comment, Donald Trump 00:12:42 based on this has posted based on the 00:12:44 ridiculous amount of publicity given to 00:12:46 Jeffrey Epstein. I have asked AG Pam 00:12:47 Bondi to produce any and all pertinent 00:12:49 grand jury testimony subject to court 00:12:51 approval. This scam should end right 00:12:53 now. And Pam Bondia said, President 00:12:55 Trump, we are ready to move on the court 00:12:57 tomorrow to unseal the grand jury 00:12:59 transcripts. I think that ultimately it 00:13:01 needs to be everything or nothing. You 00:13:03 can't give a little bit at this point 00:13:05 with the level of allegations being 00:13:07 leveled against our president that he 00:13:09 would send pretty incriminating letters 00:13:12 to the world's most notorious 00:13:15 now again before he was arrested the 00:13:18 first time, right? But given the 00:13:19 letter's contents, given that they're 00:13:21 doing so much, they're going to be suing 00:13:22 the Wall Street Journal over this. To 00:13:24 deny it, I think if it turns out to be 00:13:27 true is devastating. I mean, totally 00:13:30 devastating and horrific. And no one 00:13:32 should defend it if it's true. And 00:13:34 that's what we need to find out at this 00:13:36 point. So, I think the answer is clearly 00:13:38 that yes, I would love the Wall Street 00:13:40 Journal to release this photo if they 00:13:42 have it in their possession, if they can 00:13:43 release it from their source. And I 00:13:44 would love for the DOJ to declassify the 00:13:47 actual relevant pieces of this whole 00:13:49 thing because the absolutely central 00:13:52 piece of evidence in this whole story 00:13:54 are these letters which are in a 00:13:56 leatherbound album and supposedly in the 00:13:59 DOJ's possession. That's clearly not 00:14:01 going to be a grand jury transcript. 00:14:03 That's going to be one of the pieces of 00:14:05 evidence they collected from Epstein or 00:14:07 Maxwell. And so that is a different 00:14:10 category altogether. So, I think given 00:14:12 that, it's hard to see this as anything 00:14:14 other than a distraction from what is 00:14:16 actually relevant here, which is, does 00:14:18 this album exist? Yes or no. Show us the 00:14:21 evidence, right? Show us the physical 00:14:23 evidence. Instead, this is just going to 00:14:25 get people riled up because it's an 00:14:27 Epstein release, but it's guaranteed by 00:14:29 definition not to have the evidence one 00:14:32 way or another. A transcript is not 00:14:34 going to have a piece of physical 00:14:35 evidence. And we need to demand answers 00:14:37 on that because either it exists or it 00:14:39 doesn't. And if it does exist, that's a 00:14:42 huge problem. If it doesn't for the Wall 00:14:44 Street Journal, that's a huge problem. 00:14:46 And I'm really not sure which we are 00:14:48 going to get first. All I know is that 00:14:51 if you are looking from the outside, I 00:14:53 would highly recommend that you don't 00:14:55 just dismiss things based on a quick hot 00:14:58 Twitter take. There's a lot to this 00:15:01 story that is corroborating. And also, 00:15:05 we need more evidence on before we can 00:15:07 really make up their mind. And I see a 00:15:09 lot of people have just already written 00:15:10 it off as completely true or completely 00:15:13 false. I think they're not thinking 00:15:15 through the implications of if this is 00:15:17 true, how really crazy it would be if we 00:15:21 live in that world. And then also the 00:15:23 people who are dismissing it as false 00:15:25 right away, you're not really thinking 00:15:27 through like you might be defending a a 00:15:30 right that that is one of the outcomes 00:15:32 that could be true here. We don't know. 00:15:34 Uh and again, even if it is true, we 00:15:37 don't know what is meant by things like 00:15:39 may every day be another wonderful 00:15:42 secret. Uh when calling Jeffrey Epstein 00:15:44 a pal, we wouldn't know what that meant. 00:15:46 But um yeah, it's it's just stunning. So 00:15:49 this report, you absolutely have to 00:15:51 watch it. It is we're going to have a 00:15:53 lot more in the coming days to try to 00:15:55 validate it or falsify it. And we'll see 00:15:58 which one happens first. And yeah, 00:16:01 that's pretty much all I'm prepared to
identifier: 4362
model: gemini-2.5-pro| input-price: 1.25 output-price: 10 max-context-length: 200_000
host: 193.8.40.126
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aKG75-EMZdMinclude_comments: None
include_timestamps: 1
include_glossary: None
output_language: en
cost: 0.03679625
*Abstract:* This video provides a comprehensive review and demonstration of the new Luckfox Lyra Zero W, a highly affordable $17 single-board computer. The board features a Rockchip RK3506B SOC with three ARM Cortex-A7 cores, 512MB of RAM, 256MB of onboard SPI flash, an SD card slot, and 2.4 GHz WiFi, all in a Raspberry Pi Zero form factor. The review covers the initial setup process, demonstrating a quick boot into a pre-installed Buildroot OS via an ADB connection. The presenter then shows how to flash new images and successfully installs and runs a full Ubuntu 22.04 environment from an SD card, including WiFi configuration. Performance is evaluated through power consumption measurements (idling at ~130mA) and a custom Python benchmark, which shows significant performance gains over typical microcontrollers. The video culminates in a demonstration of the board's ability to drive a 10.1-inch DSI touchscreen display and run a full, albeit software-rendered, XFCE graphical desktop environment, highlighting its impressive versatility for its low price point. *A Deep Dive into the $17 Luckfox Lyra Zero W: Setup, Benchmarks, and Desktop Demo* * *0:00 Impressive Value:* The video introduces the Luckfox Lyra Zero W, a $17 single-board computer (SBC) capable of running a full Ubuntu environment with WiFi and 40 GPIO pins. * *0:44 Hardware Specifications:* The board is detailed, featuring a Rockchip RK3506B SOC (3x ARM Cortex-A7 cores), 512MB RAM, 256MB SPI flash, SD card slot, USB-C, and a MIPI DSI interface in a Pi Zero form factor. * *3:23 Quick and Easy Setup:* Out of the box, the device boots in under 12 seconds into a Buildroot OS and is immediately accessible via ADB over a single USB-C cable. * *4:53 Low Power Consumption:* Power measurement shows the device idles at approximately 130mA (around 0.65W at 5V), making it suitable for low-power applications. * *6:14 Flashing and OS Options:* The video demonstrates how to flash a new Buildroot image to the internal SPI flash and also showcases a custom-built Ubuntu 22.04 LTS image running from an SD card. * *11:30 WiFi Configuration:* A step-by-step guide is provided for configuring and connecting to a WiFi network on both the Buildroot and Ubuntu operating systems. * *13:19 Performance Benchmarking:* Using a custom Python script, the SBC's performance is benchmarked, showing it is significantly more powerful than microcontroller-class devices like the RP2040 and ESP32-P4. * *17:21 Driving a DSI Display:* The board is shown to be capable of driving a 10.1-inch, 1280x800 DSI touchscreen display directly with no extra configuration needed. * *18:46 Full Desktop Environment:* The video demonstrates the installation and use of a full graphical desktop (XFCE via `xubuntu-desktop`) on the device, showcasing a usable, albeit software-rendered and laggy, desktop experience. * *9:49 & 20:35 Giveaway and Availability:* The presenter announces a giveaway for four of the boards and notes that they are available for purchase from his online store. I used gemini-2.5-pro| input-price: 1.25 output-price: 10 max-context-length: 200_000 on rocketrecap dot com to summarize the transcript. Cost (if I didn't use the free tier): $0.04 Input tokens: 23205 Output tokens: 779
Abstract:
This video provides a comprehensive review and demonstration of the new Luckfox Lyra Zero W, a highly affordable $17 single-board computer. The board features a Rockchip RK3506B SOC with three ARM Cortex-A7 cores, 512MB of RAM, 256MB of onboard SPI flash, an SD card slot, and 2.4 GHz WiFi, all in a Raspberry Pi Zero form factor.
The review covers the initial setup process, demonstrating a quick boot into a pre-installed Buildroot OS via an ADB connection. The presenter then shows how to flash new images and successfully installs and runs a full Ubuntu 22.04 environment from an SD card, including WiFi configuration. Performance is evaluated through power consumption measurements (idling at ~130mA) and a custom Python benchmark, which shows significant performance gains over typical microcontrollers. The video culminates in a demonstration of the board's ability to drive a 10.1-inch DSI touchscreen display and run a full, albeit software-rendered, XFCE graphical desktop environment, highlighting its impressive versatility for its low price point.
A Deep Dive into the $17 Luckfox Lyra Zero W: Setup, Benchmarks, and Desktop Demo
Below, I will provide input for an example video (comprising of title, description, and transcript, in this order) and the corresponding abstract and summary I expect. Afterward, I will provide a new transcript that I want you to summarize in the same format. **Please give an abstract of the transcript and then summarize the transcript in a self-contained bullet list format.** Include starting timestamps, important details and key takeaways. Example Input: Fluidigm Polaris Part 2- illuminator and camera mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Subscribed 369 Share Download Clip Save 5,857 views Aug 26, 2024 Fluidigm Polaris part 1 : • Fluidigm Polaris (Part 1) - Biotech g... Ebay listings: https://www.ebay.co.uk/usr/mikeselect... Merch https://mikeselectricstuff.creator-sp... Transcript Follow along using the transcript. Show transcript mikeselectricstuff 131K subscribers Videos About Support on Patreon 40 Comments @robertwatsonbath 6 hours ago Thanks Mike. Ooof! - with the level of bodgery going on around 15:48 I think shame would have made me do a board re spin, out of my own pocket if I had to. 1 Reply @Muonium1 9 hours ago The green LED looks different from the others and uses phosphor conversion because of the "green gap" problem where green InGaN emitters suffer efficiency droop at high currents. Phosphide based emitters don't start becoming efficient until around 600nm so also can't be used for high power green emitters. See the paper and plot by Matthias Auf der Maur in his 2015 paper on alloy fluctuations in InGaN as the cause of reduced external quantum efficiency at longer (green) wavelengths. 4 Reply 1 reply @tafsirnahian669 10 hours ago (edited) Can this be used as an astrophotography camera? Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 6 hours ago Yes, but may need a shutter to avoid light during readout Reply @2010craggy 11 hours ago Narrowband filters we use in Astronomy (Astrophotography) are sided- they work best passing light in one direction so I guess the arrows on the filter frames indicate which way round to install them in the filter wheel. 1 Reply @vitukz 12 hours ago A mate with Channel @extractions&ire could use it 2 Reply @RobertGallop 19 hours ago That LED module says it can go up to 28 amps!!! 21 amps for 100%. You should see what it does at 20 amps! Reply @Prophes0r 19 hours ago I had an "Oh SHIT!" moment when I realized that the weird trapezoidal shape of that light guide was for keystone correction of the light source. Very clever. 6 Reply @OneBiOzZ 20 hours ago given the cost of the CCD you think they could have run another PCB for it 9 Reply @tekvax01 21 hours ago $20 thousand dollars per minute of run time! 1 Reply @tekvax01 22 hours ago "We spared no expense!" John Hammond Jurassic Park. *(that's why this thing costs the same as a 50-seat Greyhound Bus coach!) Reply @florianf4257 22 hours ago The smearing on the image could be due to the fact that you don't use a shutter, so you see brighter stripes under bright areas of the image as you still iluminate these pixels while the sensor data ist shifted out towards the top. I experienced this effect back at university with a LN-Cooled CCD for Spectroscopy. The stripes disapeared as soon as you used the shutter instead of disabling it in the open position (but fokussing at 100ms integration time and continuous readout with a focal plane shutter isn't much fun). 12 Reply mikeselectricstuff · 1 reply @mikeselectricstuff 12 hours ago I didn't think of that, but makes sense 2 Reply @douro20 22 hours ago (edited) The red LED reminds me of one from Roithner Lasertechnik. I have a Symbol 2D scanner which uses two very bright LEDs from that company, one red and one red-orange. The red-orange is behind a lens which focuses it into an extremely narrow beam. 1 Reply @RicoElectrico 23 hours ago PFG is Pulse Flush Gate according to the datasheet. Reply @dcallan812 23 hours ago Very interesting. 2x Reply @littleboot_ 1 day ago Cool interesting device Reply @dav1dbone 1 day ago I've stripped large projectors, looks similar, wonder if some of those castings are a magnesium alloy? Reply @kevywevvy8833 1 day ago ironic that some of those Phlatlight modules are used in some of the cheapest disco lights. 1 Reply 1 reply @bill6255 1 day ago Great vid - gets right into subject in title, its packed with information, wraps up quickly. Should get a YT award! imho 3 Reply @JAKOB1977 1 day ago (edited) The whole sensor module incl. a 5 grand 50mpix sensor for 49 £.. highest bid atm Though also a limited CCD sensor, but for the right buyer its a steal at these relative low sums. Architecture Full Frame CCD (Square Pixels) Total Number of Pixels 8304 (H) × 6220 (V) = 51.6 Mp Number of Effective Pixels 8208 (H) × 6164 (V) = 50.5 Mp Number of Active Pixels 8176 (H) × 6132 (V) = 50.1 Mp Pixel Size 6.0 m (H) × 6.0 m (V) Active Image Size 49.1 mm (H) × 36.8 mm (V) 61.3 mm (Diagonal), 645 1.1x Optical Format Aspect Ratio 4:3 Horizontal Outputs 4 Saturation Signal 40.3 ke− Output Sensitivity 31 V/e− Quantum Efficiency KAF−50100−CAA KAF−50100−AAA KAF−50100−ABA (with Lens) 22%, 22%, 16% (Peak R, G, B) 25% 62% Read Noise (f = 18 MHz) 12.5 e− Dark Signal (T = 60°C) 42 pA/cm2 Dark Current Doubling Temperature 5.7°C Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 70.2 dB Estimated Linear Dynamic Range (f = 18 MHz) 69.3 dB Charge Transfer Efficiency Horizontal Vertical 0.999995 0.999999 Blooming Protection (4 ms Exposure Time) 800X Saturation Exposure Maximum Date Rate 18 MHz Package Ceramic PGA Cover Glass MAR Coated, 2 Sides or Clear Glass Features • TRUESENSE Transparent Gate Electrode for High Sensitivity • Ultra-High Resolution • Board Dynamic Range • Low Noise Architecture • Large Active Imaging Area Applications • Digitization • Mapping/Aerial • Photography • Scientific Thx for the tear down Mike, always a joy Reply @martinalooksatthings 1 day ago 15:49 that is some great bodging on of caps, they really didn't want to respin that PCB huh 8 Reply @RhythmGamer 1 day ago Was depressed today and then a new mike video dropped and now I’m genuinely happy to get my tear down fix 1 Reply @dine9093 1 day ago (edited) Did you transfrom into Mr Blobby for a moment there? 2 Reply @NickNorton 1 day ago Thanks Mike. Your videos are always interesting. 5 Reply @KeritechElectronics 1 day ago Heavy optics indeed... Spare no expense, cost no object. Splendid build quality. The CCD is a thing of beauty! 1 Reply @YSoreil 1 day ago The pricing on that sensor is about right, I looked in to these many years ago when they were still in production since it's the only large sensor you could actually buy. Really cool to see one in the wild. 2 Reply @snik2pl 1 day ago That leds look like from led projector Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago TDI = Time Domain Integration ? 1 Reply @wolpumba4099 1 day ago (edited) Maybe the camera should not be illuminated during readout. From the datasheet of the sensor (Onsemi): saturation 40300 electrons, read noise 12.5 electrons per pixel @ 18MHz (quite bad). quantum efficiency 62% (if it has micro lenses), frame rate 1 Hz. lateral overflow drain to prevent blooming protects against 800x (factor increases linearly with exposure time) saturation exposure (32e6 electrons per pixel at 4ms exposure time), microlens has +/- 20 degree acceptance angle i guess it would be good for astrophotography 4 Reply @txm100 1 day ago (edited) Babe wake up a new mikeselectricstuff has dropped! 9 Reply @vincei4252 1 day ago That looks like a finger-lakes filter wheel, however, for astronomy they'd never use such a large stepper. 1 Reply @MRooodddvvv 1 day ago yaaaaay ! more overcomplicated optical stuff ! 4 Reply 1 reply @NoPegs 1 day ago He lives! 11 Reply 1 reply Transcript 0:00 so I've stripped all the bits of the 0:01 optical system so basically we've got 0:03 the uh the camera 0:05 itself which is mounted on this uh very 0:09 complex 0:10 adjustment thing which obviously to set 0:13 you the various tilt and uh alignment 0:15 stuff then there's two of these massive 0:18 lenses I've taken one of these apart I 0:20 think there's something like about eight 0:22 or nine Optical elements in here these 0:25 don't seem to do a great deal in terms 0:26 of electr magnification they're obiously 0:28 just about getting the image to where it 0:29 uh where it needs to be just so that 0:33 goes like that then this Optical block I 0:36 originally thought this was made of some 0:37 s crazy heavy material but it's just 0:39 really the sum of all these Optical bits 0:41 are just ridiculously heavy those lenses 0:43 are about 4 kilos each and then there's 0:45 this very heavy very solid um piece that 0:47 goes in the middle and this is so this 0:49 is the filter wheel assembly with a 0:51 hilariously oversized steper 0:53 motor driving this wheel with these very 0:57 large narrow band filters so we've got 1:00 various different shades of uh 1:03 filters there five Al together that 1:06 one's actually just showing up a silver 1:07 that's actually a a red but fairly low 1:10 transmission orangey red blue green 1:15 there's an excess cover on this side so 1:16 the filters can be accessed and changed 1:19 without taking anything else apart even 1:21 this is like ridiculous it's like solid 1:23 aluminium this is just basically a cover 1:25 the actual wavelengths of these are um 1:27 488 525 570 630 and 700 NM not sure what 1:32 the suffix on that perhaps that's the uh 1:34 the width of the spectral line say these 1:37 are very narrow band filters most of 1:39 them are you very little light through 1:41 so it's still very tight narrow band to 1:43 match the um fluoresence of the dies 1:45 they're using in the biochemical process 1:48 and obviously to reject the light that's 1:49 being fired at it from that Illuminator 1:51 box and then there's a there's a second 1:53 one of these lenses then the actual sort 1:55 of samples below that so uh very serious 1:58 amount of very uh chunky heavy Optics 2:01 okay let's take a look at this light 2:02 source made by company Lumen Dynamics 2:04 who are now part of 2:06 excelitas self-contained unit power 2:08 connector USB and this which one of the 2:11 Cable Bundle said was a TTL interface 2:14 USB wasn't used in uh the fluid 2:17 application output here and I think this 2:19 is an input for um light feedback I 2:21 don't if it's regulated or just a measur 2:23 measurement facility and the uh fiber 2:27 assembly 2:29 Square Inlet there and then there's two 2:32 outputs which have uh lens assemblies 2:35 and this small one which goes back into 2:37 that small Port just Loops out of here 2:40 straight back in So on this side we've 2:42 got the electronics which look pretty 2:44 straightforward we've got a bit of power 2:45 supply stuff over here and we've got 2:48 separate drivers for each wavelength now 2:50 interesting this is clearly been very 2:52 specifically made for this application 2:54 you I was half expecting like say some 2:56 generic drivers that could be used for a 2:58 number of different things but actually 3:00 literally specified the exact wavelength 3:02 on the PCB there is provision here for 3:04 385 NM which isn't populated but this is 3:07 clearly been designed very specifically 3:09 so these four drivers look the same but 3:10 then there's two higher power ones for 3:12 575 and 3:14 520 a slightly bigger heat sink on this 3:16 575 section there a p 24 which is 3:20 providing USB interface USB isolator the 3:23 USB interface just presents as a comport 3:26 I did have a quick look but I didn't 3:27 actually get anything sensible um I did 3:29 dump the Pi code out and there's a few 3:31 you a few sort of commands that you 3:32 could see in text but I didn't actually 3:34 manage to get it working properly I 3:36 found some software for related version 3:38 but it didn't seem to want to talk to it 3:39 but um I say that wasn't used for the 3:41 original application it might be quite 3:42 interesting to get try and get the Run 3:44 hours count out of it and the TTL 3:46 interface looks fairly straightforward 3:48 we've got positions for six opto 3:50 isolators but only five five are 3:52 installed so that corresponds with the 3:54 unused thing so I think this hopefully 3:56 should be as simple as just providing a 3:57 ttrl signal for each color to uh enable 4:00 it a big heat sink here which is there I 4:03 think there's like a big S of metal 4:04 plate through the middle of this that 4:05 all the leads are mounted on the other 4:07 side so this is heat sinking it with a 4:09 air flow from a uh just a fan in here 4:13 obviously don't have the air flow 4:14 anywhere near the Optics so conduction 4:17 cool through to this plate that's then 4:18 uh air cooled got some pots which are 4:21 presumably power 4:22 adjustments okay let's take a look at 4:24 the other side which is uh much more 4:27 interesting see we've got some uh very 4:31 uh neatly Twisted cable assemblies there 4:35 a bunch of leads so we've got one here 4:37 475 up here 430 NM 630 575 and 520 4:44 filters and dcro mirrors a quick way to 4:48 see what's white is if we just shine 4:49 some white light through 4:51 here not sure how it is is to see on the 4:54 camera but shining white light we do 4:55 actually get a bit of red a bit of blue 4:57 some yellow here so the obstacle path 5:00 575 it goes sort of here bounces off 5:03 this mirror and goes out the 520 goes 5:07 sort of down here across here and up 5:09 there 630 goes basically straight 5:13 through 5:15 430 goes across there down there along 5:17 there and the 475 goes down here and 5:20 left this is the light sensing thing 5:22 think here there's just a um I think 5:24 there a photo diode or other sensor 5:26 haven't actually taken that off and 5:28 everything's fixed down to this chunk of 5:31 aluminium which acts as the heat 5:32 spreader that then conducts the heat to 5:33 the back side for the heat 5:35 sink and the actual lead packages all 5:38 look fairly similar except for this one 5:41 on the 575 which looks quite a bit more 5:44 substantial big spay 5:46 Terminals and the interface for this 5:48 turned out to be extremely simple it's 5:50 literally a 5V TTL level to enable each 5:54 color doesn't seem to be any tensity 5:56 control but there are some additional 5:58 pins on that connector that weren't used 5:59 in the through time thing so maybe 6:01 there's some extra lines that control 6:02 that I couldn't find any data on this uh 6:05 unit and the um their current product 6:07 range is quite significantly different 6:09 so we've got the uh blue these 6:13 might may well be saturating the camera 6:16 so they might look a bit weird so that's 6:17 the 430 6:18 blue the 575 6:24 yellow uh 6:26 475 light blue 6:29 the uh 520 6:31 green and the uh 630 red now one 6:36 interesting thing I noticed for the 6:39 575 it's actually it's actually using a 6:42 white lead and then filtering it rather 6:44 than using all the other ones are using 6:46 leads which are the fundamental colors 6:47 but uh this is actually doing white and 6:50 it's a combination of this filter and 6:52 the dichroic mirrors that are turning to 6:55 Yellow if we take the filter out and a 6:57 lot of the a lot of the um blue content 7:00 is going this way the red is going 7:02 straight through these two mirrors so 7:05 this is clearly not reflecting much of 7:08 that so we end up with the yellow coming 7:10 out of uh out of there which is a fairly 7:14 light yellow color which you don't 7:16 really see from high intensity leads so 7:19 that's clearly why they've used the 7:20 white to uh do this power consumption of 7:23 the white is pretty high so going up to 7:25 about 2 and 1 half amps on that color 7:27 whereas most of the other colors are 7:28 only drawing half an amp or so at 24 7:30 volts the uh the green is up to about 7:32 1.2 but say this thing is uh much 7:35 brighter and if you actually run all the 7:38 colors at the same time you get a fairly 7:41 reasonable um looking white coming out 7:43 of it and one thing you might just be 7:45 out to notice is there is some sort 7:46 color banding around here that's not 7:49 getting uh everything s completely 7:51 concentric and I think that's where this 7:53 fiber optic thing comes 7:58 in I'll 8:00 get a couple of Fairly accurately shaped 8:04 very sort of uniform color and looking 8:06 at What's um inside here we've basically 8:09 just got this Square Rod so this is 8:12 clearly yeah the lights just bouncing 8:13 off all the all the various sides to um 8:16 get a nice uniform illumination uh this 8:19 back bit looks like it's all potted so 8:21 nothing I really do to get in there I 8:24 think this is fiber so I have come 8:26 across um cables like this which are 8:27 liquid fill but just looking through the 8:30 end of this it's probably a bit hard to 8:31 see it does look like there fiber ends 8:34 going going on there and so there's this 8:36 feedback thing which is just obviously 8:39 compensating for the any light losses 8:41 through here to get an accurate 8:43 representation of uh the light that's 8:45 been launched out of these two 8:47 fibers and you see uh 8:49 these have got this sort of trapezium 8:54 shape light guides again it's like a 8:56 sort of acrylic or glass light guide 9:00 guess projected just to make the right 9:03 rectangular 9:04 shape and look at this Center assembly 9:07 um the light output doesn't uh change 9:10 whether you feed this in or not so it's 9:11 clear not doing any internal Clos Loop 9:14 control obviously there may well be some 9:16 facility for it to do that but it's not 9:17 being used in this 9:19 application and so this output just 9:21 produces a voltage on the uh outle 9:24 connector proportional to the amount of 9:26 light that's present so there's a little 9:28 diffuser in the back there 9:30 and then there's just some kind of uh 9:33 Optical sensor looks like a 9:35 chip looking at the lead it's a very 9:37 small package on the PCB with this lens 9:40 assembly over the top and these look 9:43 like they're actually on a copper 9:44 Metalized PCB for maximum thermal 9:47 performance and yeah it's a very small 9:49 package looks like it's a ceramic 9:51 package and there's a thermister there 9:53 for temperature monitoring this is the 9:56 475 blue one this is the 520 need to 9:59 Green which is uh rather different OB 10:02 it's a much bigger D with lots of bond 10:04 wise but also this looks like it's using 10:05 a phosphor if I shine a blue light at it 10:08 lights up green so this is actually a 10:10 phosphor conversion green lead which 10:12 I've I've come across before they want 10:15 that specific wavelength so they may be 10:17 easier to tune a phosphor than tune the 10:20 um semiconductor material to get the uh 10:23 right right wavelength from the lead 10:24 directly uh red 630 similar size to the 10:28 blue one or does seem to have a uh a 10:31 lens on top of it there is a sort of red 10:33 coloring to 10:35 the die but that doesn't appear to be 10:38 fluorescent as far as I can 10:39 tell and the white one again a little 10:41 bit different sort of much higher 10:43 current 10:46 connectors a makeer name on that 10:48 connector flot light not sure if that's 10:52 the connector or the lead 10:54 itself and obviously with the phosphor 10:56 and I'd imagine that phosphor may well 10:58 be tuned to get the maximum to the uh 5 11:01 cenm and actually this white one looks 11:04 like a St fairly standard product I just 11:06 found it in Mouse made by luminous 11:09 devices in fact actually I think all 11:11 these are based on various luminous 11:13 devices modules and they're you take 11:17 looks like they taking the nearest 11:18 wavelength and then just using these 11:19 filters to clean it up to get a precise 11:22 uh spectral line out of it so quite a 11:25 nice neat and um extreme 11:30 bright light source uh sure I've got any 11:33 particular use for it so I think this 11:35 might end up on 11:36 eBay but uh very pretty to look out and 11:40 without the uh risk of burning your eyes 11:43 out like you do with lasers so I thought 11:45 it would be interesting to try and 11:46 figure out the runtime of this things 11:48 like this we usually keep some sort 11:49 record of runtime cuz leads degrade over 11:51 time I couldn't get any software to work 11:52 through the USB face but then had a 11:54 thought probably going to be writing the 11:55 runtime periodically to the e s prom so 11:58 I just just scope up that and noticed it 12:00 was doing right every 5 minutes so I 12:02 just ran it for a while periodically 12:04 reading the E squ I just held the pick 12:05 in in reset and um put clip over to read 12:07 the square prom and found it was writing 12:10 one location per color every 5 minutes 12:12 so if one color was on it would write 12:14 that location every 5 minutes and just 12:16 increment it by one so after doing a few 12:18 tests with different colors of different 12:19 time periods it looked extremely 12:21 straightforward it's like a four bite 12:22 count for each color looking at the 12:24 original data that was in it all the 12:26 colors apart from Green were reading 12:28 zero and the green was reading four 12:30 indicating a total 20 minutes run time 12:32 ever if it was turned on run for a short 12:34 time then turned off that might not have 12:36 been counted but even so indicates this 12:37 thing wasn't used a great deal the whole 12:40 s process of doing a run can be several 12:42 hours but it'll only be doing probably 12:43 the Imaging at the end of that so you 12:46 wouldn't expect to be running for a long 12:47 time but say a single color for 20 12:50 minutes over its whole lifetime does 12:52 seem a little bit on the low side okay 12:55 let's look at the camera un fortunately 12:57 I managed to not record any sound when I 12:58 did this it's also a couple of months 13:00 ago so there's going to be a few details 13:02 that I've forgotten so I'm just going to 13:04 dub this over the original footage so um 13:07 take the lid off see this massive great 13:10 heat sink so this is a pel cool camera 13:12 we've got this blower fan producing a 13:14 fair amount of air flow through 13:16 it the connector here there's the ccds 13:19 mounted on the board on the 13:24 right this unplugs so we've got a bit of 13:27 power supply stuff on here 13:29 USB interface I think that's the Cyprus 13:32 microcontroller High speeded USB 13:34 interface there's a zyink spon fpga some 13:40 RAM and there's a couple of ATD 13:42 converters can't quite read what those 13:45 those are but anal 13:47 devices um little bit of bodgery around 13:51 here extra decoupling obviously they 13:53 have having some noise issues this is 13:55 around the ram chip quite a lot of extra 13:57 capacitors been added there 13:59 uh there's a couple of amplifiers prior 14:01 to the HD converter buffers or Andor 14:05 amplifiers taking the CCD 14:08 signal um bit more power spy stuff here 14:11 this is probably all to do with 14:12 generating the various CCD bias voltages 14:14 they uh need quite a lot of exotic 14:18 voltages next board down is just a 14:20 shield and an interconnect 14:24 boardly shielding the power supply stuff 14:26 from some the more sensitive an log 14:28 stuff 14:31 and this is the bottom board which is 14:32 just all power supply 14:34 stuff as you can see tons of capacitors 14:37 or Transformer in 14:42 there and this is the CCD which is a uh 14:47 very impressive thing this is a kf50 100 14:50 originally by true sense then codec 14:53 there ON 14:54 Semiconductor it's 50 megapixels uh the 14:58 only price I could find was this one 15:00 5,000 bucks and the architecture you can 15:03 see there actually two separate halves 15:04 which explains the Dual AZ converters 15:06 and two amplifiers it's literally split 15:08 down the middle and duplicated so it's 15:10 outputting two streams in parallel just 15:13 to keep the bandwidth sensible and it's 15:15 got this amazing um diffraction effects 15:18 it's got micro lenses over the pixel so 15:20 there's there's a bit more Optics going 15:22 on than on a normal 15:25 sensor few more bodges on the CCD board 15:28 including this wire which isn't really 15:29 tacked down very well which is a bit uh 15:32 bit of a mess quite a few bits around 15:34 this board where they've uh tacked 15:36 various bits on which is not super 15:38 impressive looks like CCD drivers on the 15:40 left with those 3 ohm um damping 15:43 resistors on the 15:47 output get a few more little bodges 15:50 around here some of 15:52 the and there's this separator the 15:54 silica gel to keep the moisture down but 15:56 there's this separator that actually 15:58 appears to be cut from piece of 15:59 antistatic 16:04 bag and this sort of thermal block on 16:06 top of this stack of three pel Cola 16:12 modules so as with any Stacks they get 16:16 um larger as they go back towards the 16:18 heat sink because each P's got to not 16:20 only take the heat from the previous but 16:21 also the waste heat which is quite 16:27 significant you see a little temperature 16:29 sensor here that copper block which 16:32 makes contact with the back of the 16:37 CCD and this's the back of the 16:40 pelas this then contacts the heat sink 16:44 on the uh rear there a few thermal pads 16:46 as well for some of the other power 16:47 components on this 16:51 PCB okay I've connected this uh camera 16:54 up I found some drivers on the disc that 16:56 seem to work under Windows 7 couldn't 16:58 get to install under Windows 11 though 17:01 um in the absence of any sort of lens or 17:03 being bothered to the proper amount I've 17:04 just put some f over it and put a little 17:06 pin in there to make a pinhole lens and 17:08 software gives a few options I'm not 17:11 entirely sure what all these are there's 17:12 obviously a clock frequency 22 MHz low 17:15 gain and with PFG no idea what that is 17:19 something something game programmable 17:20 Something game perhaps ver exposure 17:23 types I think focus is just like a 17:25 continuous grab until you tell it to 17:27 stop not entirely sure all these options 17:30 are obviously exposure time uh triggers 17:33 there ex external hardware trigger inut 17:35 you just trigger using a um thing on 17:37 screen so the resolution is 8176 by 17:40 6132 and you can actually bin those 17:42 where you combine multiple pixels to get 17:46 increased gain at the expense of lower 17:48 resolution down this is a 10sec exposure 17:51 obviously of the pin hole it's very uh 17:53 intensitive so we just stand still now 17:56 downloading it there's the uh exposure 17:59 so when it's 18:01 um there's a little status thing down 18:03 here so that tells you the um exposure 18:07 [Applause] 18:09 time it's this is just it 18:15 downloading um it is quite I'm seeing 18:18 quite a lot like smearing I think that I 18:20 don't know whether that's just due to 18:21 pixels overloading or something else I 18:24 mean yeah it's not it's not um out of 18:26 the question that there's something not 18:27 totally right about this camera 18:28 certainly was bodge wise on there um I 18:31 don't I'd imagine a camera like this 18:32 it's got a fairly narrow range of 18:34 intensities that it's happy with I'm not 18:36 going to spend a great deal of time on 18:38 this if you're interested in this camera 18:40 maybe for astronomy or something and 18:42 happy to sort of take the risk of it may 18:44 not be uh perfect I'll um I think I'll 18:47 stick this on eBay along with the 18:48 Illuminator I'll put a link down in the 18:50 description to the listing take your 18:52 chances to grab a bargain so for example 18:54 here we see this vertical streaking so 18:56 I'm not sure how normal that is this is 18:58 on fairly bright scene looking out the 19:02 window if I cut the exposure time down 19:04 on that it's now 1 second 19:07 exposure again most of the image 19:09 disappears again this is looks like it's 19:11 possibly over still overloading here go 19:14 that go down to say say quarter a 19:16 second so again I think there might be 19:19 some Auto gain control going on here um 19:21 this is with the PFG option let's try 19:23 turning that off and see what 19:25 happens so I'm not sure this is actually 19:27 more streaking or which just it's 19:29 cranked up the gain all the dis display 19:31 gray scale to show what um you know the 19:33 range of things that it's captured 19:36 there's one of one of 12 things in the 19:38 software there's um you can see of you 19:40 can't seem to read out the temperature 19:42 of the pelta cooler but you can set the 19:44 temperature and if you said it's a 19:46 different temperature you see the power 19:48 consumption jump up running the cooler 19:50 to get the temperature you requested but 19:52 I can't see anything anywhere that tells 19:54 you whether the cool is at the at the 19:56 temperature other than the power 19:57 consumption going down and there's no 19:59 temperature read out 20:03 here and just some yeah this is just 20:05 sort of very basic software I'm sure 20:07 there's like an API for more 20:09 sophisticated 20:10 applications but so if you know anything 20:12 more about these cameras please um stick 20:14 in the 20:15 comments um incidentally when I was 20:18 editing I didn't notice there was a bent 20:19 pin on the um CCD but I did fix that 20:22 before doing these tests and also 20:24 reactivated the um silica gel desicant 20:26 cuz I noticed it was uh I was getting 20:28 bit of condensation on the window but um 20:31 yeah so a couple of uh interesting but 20:34 maybe not particularly uh useful pieces 20:37 of Kit except for someone that's got a 20:38 very specific use so um I'll stick a 20:42 I'll stick these on eBay put a link in 20:44 the description and say hopefully 20:45 someone could actually make some uh good 20:47 use of these things Example Output: **Abstract:** This video presents Part 2 of a teardown focusing on the optical components of a Fluidigm Polaris biotechnology instrument, specifically the multi-wavelength illuminator and the high-resolution CCD camera. The Lumen Dynamics illuminator unit is examined in detail, revealing its construction using multiple high-power LEDs (430nm, 475nm, 520nm, 575nm, 630nm) combined via dichroic mirrors and filters. A square fiber optic rod is used to homogenize the light. A notable finding is the use of a phosphor-converted white LED filtered to achieve the 575nm output. The unit features simple TTL activation for each color, conduction cooling, and internal homogenization optics. Analysis of its EEPROM suggests extremely low operational runtime. The camera module teardown showcases a 50 Megapixel ON Semiconductor KAF-50100 CCD sensor with micro-lenses, cooled by a multi-stage Peltier stack. The control electronics include an FPGA and a USB interface. Significant post-manufacturing modifications ("bodges") are observed on the camera's circuit boards. Basic functional testing using vendor software and a pinhole lens confirms image capture but reveals prominent vertical streaking artifacts, the cause of which remains uncertain (potential overload, readout artifact, or fault). **Exploring the Fluidigm Polaris: A Detailed Look at its High-End Optics and Camera System** * **0:00 High-End Optics:** The system utilizes heavy, high-quality lenses and mirrors for precise imaging, weighing around 4 kilos each. * **0:49 Narrow Band Filters:** A filter wheel with five narrow band filters (488, 525, 570, 630, and 700 nm) ensures accurate fluorescence detection and rejection of excitation light. * **2:01 Customizable Illumination:** The Lumen Dynamics light source offers five individually controllable LED wavelengths (430, 475, 520, 575, 630 nm) with varying power outputs. The 575nm yellow LED is uniquely achieved using a white LED with filtering. * **3:45 TTL Control:** The light source is controlled via a simple TTL interface, enabling easy on/off switching for each LED color. * **12:55 Sophisticated Camera:** The system includes a 50-megapixel Kodak KAI-50100 CCD camera with a Peltier cooling system for reduced noise. * **14:54 High-Speed Data Transfer:** The camera features dual analog-to-digital converters to manage the high data throughput of the 50-megapixel sensor, which is effectively two 25-megapixel sensors operating in parallel. * **18:11 Possible Issues:** The video creator noted some potential issues with the camera, including image smearing. * **18:11 Limited Dynamic Range:** The camera's sensor has a limited dynamic range, making it potentially challenging to capture scenes with a wide range of brightness levels. * **11:45 Low Runtime:** Internal data suggests the system has seen minimal usage, with only 20 minutes of recorded runtime for the green LED. * **20:38 Availability on eBay:** Both the illuminator and camera are expected to be listed for sale on eBay. Here is the real transcript. Please summarize it: 00:00:00 We have a fully 00:00:01 working Ubuntu environment 00:00:04 with an LTS release and a 00:00:05 good kernel on a $17 device 00:00:08 that has wifi that's got 40 GPIO pins 00:00:10 that draws nearly no power. 00:00:12 This thing is just phenomenal. 00:00:14 Welcome back everyone. 00:00:16 Today we are looking at the brand new 00:00:18 Luckfox Lyra Zero W. 00:00:21 This thing just came out 00:00:23 last month and I love it. 00:00:24 I think it's absolutely amazing. 00:00:26 So we're gonna dive into 00:00:27 all the details about this. 00:00:29 We're gonna benchmark it. 00:00:30 We're gonna flash it 00:00:30 with different images. 00:00:31 We're gonna plug it into some 00:00:33 screens and see how it works. 00:00:35 But first I just wanna let you know 00:00:36 that this video is sponsored by Brilliant 00:00:38 who can help you become a better thinker. 00:00:40 But more on them in a little bit. 00:00:41 Time to get into this. 00:00:44 So looking at this up close, 00:00:46 it is a very familiar zero 00:00:48 as they call it form factor. 00:00:50 So it's essentially, 00:00:52 I wouldn't say it's 00:00:53 competing with the Raspberry Pi Zero 00:00:54 but I think it's a 00:00:55 very, very good alternative 00:00:56 especially for how cheap it is. 00:00:58 So we've got a 40 pin 00:01:00 standard Pi Two style header there. 00:01:02 Now that's got I think 29 00:01:04 Rockchip Matrix I.O. pins on it. 00:01:07 So they can be multiplexed through 00:01:09 every different function. 00:01:10 That's because this has the RK3506B 00:01:13 which is a great little SOC. 00:01:15 The SOC has three cores 00:01:17 that are all ARM Cortex A7. 00:01:20 So 32 bit and it's the ARM 00:01:22 V7 instruction set or ARM HF. 00:01:24 It also has the 00:01:25 Cortex M0 in there as well. 00:01:28 But it's a very low power but very 00:01:30 powerful little SOC. 00:01:32 Next to that, we've then got 512 mega RAM 00:01:34 which is just insane. 00:01:35 We've got our wireless module there. 00:01:37 That's 2.4 GHz, SD card slot. 00:01:40 We've got USB pins there like 00:01:42 we've seen on the other Lyra. 00:01:44 We've got our power and USB on the go. 00:01:47 We've got a normal USB port 00:01:48 there, MIPI CSI for display, 00:01:52 an onboard antenna, an external antenna. 00:01:55 And then we have 256 meg 00:01:57 of SPI flash on the bottom. 00:02:00 So this is a very dense, 00:02:02 very powerful little device 00:02:04 and it's stupidly cheap. 00:02:05 It's 17 US dollars and I 00:02:08 have it in stock of course. 00:02:09 I also have four of these to give away. 00:02:11 So Luckfox was nice enough 00:02:13 that they decided to send me some extras. 00:02:15 They sent me five extras. 00:02:16 I'm keeping this one. 00:02:17 But four of them I'm gonna give away. 00:02:19 So hang around and 00:02:20 watch more of this video 00:02:22 to see how you can get 00:02:23 one of these for free 00:02:24 if you want one that is. 00:02:25 Going over to the Wiki. 00:02:28 You can see here that the documentation 00:02:30 is actually just a little bit lacking. 00:02:32 It's such a new product 00:02:33 that I haven't 00:02:34 finished filling this out yet. 00:02:35 If you jump up to the 00:02:36 product introduction here, 00:02:37 you can see the Lyra Ultra 00:02:39 and Ultra W do also use this. 00:02:41 So you get a little idea here. 00:02:43 It's got the 512 meg, it's got WiFi, 00:02:46 it's got the MIPI CSI interface there. 00:02:48 Sorry, MIPI DSI. 00:02:50 It's got your USB ports, 29 IO pins, 00:02:53 it doesn't have the 00:02:54 embedded controller though, 00:02:55 it doesn't have that 8 gig eMMC. 00:02:57 So I did do another 00:02:58 video previously on these 00:03:00 if you wanted to check it out, 00:03:01 but this is the Lyra Zero W. 00:03:04 So it's a little bit 00:03:05 thinned out as you would expect. 00:03:07 Getting started with 00:03:08 this is very easy now too. 00:03:11 It's got a initial image 00:03:13 flash onto the SPI flash 00:03:14 that we can boot up. 00:03:15 That has ADB. 00:03:17 So all we really have to do 00:03:17 is connect it using this port 00:03:19 to the power on our computer 00:03:20 and we'll be able to connect to it. 00:03:21 Let's have a look at how to do that. 00:03:23 For this, I'm just gonna 00:03:24 grab a standard black USB type C 00:03:27 cable, one end into the air, into there. 00:03:30 The other end, I'm gonna 00:03:31 plug it into my computer 00:03:32 over here and you'll 00:03:33 see very, very quickly 00:03:34 you've got this little heartbeat LED. 00:03:36 So that does not take long to start. 00:03:38 That's showing that it's 00:03:38 basically loaded the kernel already 00:03:41 and in a few seconds, 00:03:42 that's gonna be at a desktop environment. 00:03:44 Now, if we had configured WiFi, 00:03:45 we could SSH straight to it, 00:03:47 but we're gonna use the ADB 00:03:48 shell that's built straight in. 00:03:50 So jumping back over to the computer, 00:03:52 which is here, you can see, 00:03:55 we got ADB devices, it's listed there. 00:03:59 So if we got ADB 00:04:00 shell, we are straight in. 00:04:05 Have a look, we have Buildroot 2402. 00:04:08 So that's the one that comes, that's the 00:04:11 one that's in the SDK. 00:04:13 And what else do we have? 00:04:14 We have our 512 mega 00:04:15 RAM, no swap configured. 00:04:17 We have our 256 meg of SPI flash. 00:04:22 We have a 6.1 kernel, which is awesome. 00:04:25 You can see here, it's 00:04:26 that ARMv7 instruction set 00:04:28 and I can't type. 00:04:33 There we go. 00:04:34 So there are our three cores. 00:04:36 So this is a very, 00:04:37 very capable little device 00:04:39 for something that booted so quickly 00:04:41 and less than 12 seconds to be 00:04:45 completely ready essentially. 00:04:48 It's $17, boots out 00:04:49 quickly, that easy to connect 00:04:51 is actually quite amazing. 00:04:53 What I'm curious though is 00:04:53 how much power it consumes. 00:04:55 So we can test that out by 00:04:56 putting the FNB58 in the way. 00:04:59 Now this is just gonna be an initial, 00:05:02 what's it consume off 00:05:03 the bat sort of thing. 00:05:04 In fact, I'm gonna plug 00:05:06 it in over on this side. 00:05:07 It's not gonna be whilst it's running 00:05:09 anything too intense. 00:05:10 We will do that later. 00:05:12 I just wanna see to start 00:05:13 with what sort of power profile 00:05:14 we're looking at for 00:05:15 something that you can plug in, 00:05:16 use instantly and it's ready to go. 00:05:21 So there we go. 00:05:25 It's drawing stuff all. 00:05:30 It peaked at 370 milliamps there, which 00:05:32 you should have seen. 00:05:33 So it did manage to draw a bit whilst 00:05:35 it's doing something 00:05:36 but now it appears to have booted 00:05:38 and it's idling around 128. 00:05:40 If we jump back over to the 00:05:41 computer, it's kicked us out. 00:05:43 It hasn't picked it up yet. 00:05:45 Oh yeah, of course, 00:05:45 because it's not plugged in. 00:05:47 This power cable goes up 00:05:48 to my dedicated power supply 00:05:50 but that's stable at 130 milliamps now 00:05:53 running a Linux distribution, 00:05:54 which really is really incredible. 00:05:58 Now, if you are enjoying this content 00:05:59 and if you like 00:06:00 seeing this sort of thing, 00:06:01 please don't forget to like and subscribe 00:06:02 because the algorithm is 00:06:04 pretty harsh on YouTube 00:06:06 but every bit of 00:06:07 engagement, whether it's a thumbs up, 00:06:08 whether it's the 00:06:09 subscribing to the channel 00:06:10 or just leave me a comment 00:06:11 below, really, really helps. 00:06:14 Now, this, as I said, 00:06:16 is the initial image 00:06:17 that it comes with. 00:06:18 It's not necessarily the 00:06:18 latest one from the SDK. 00:06:20 So you can either 00:06:20 download it or build it yourself. 00:06:22 In this instance, I have built it myself 00:06:24 but if we have a look 00:06:25 at where to download it, 00:06:26 coming back over here, if 00:06:27 we go to image flashing, 00:06:29 you can see it does 00:06:30 support Ubuntu and Buildroot 00:06:32 but unfortunately the Ubuntu 00:06:33 images are no longer available 00:06:34 because they don't 00:06:35 have approvals anymore. 00:06:36 I'm not sure of the exact story 00:06:38 but you can click on 00:06:39 the Google Drive link 00:06:40 which I've actually already got here 00:06:42 and you can download 00:06:43 the Lyra Zero images. 00:06:45 Now, there's no point 00:06:45 putting that on an SD card 00:06:47 unless you want more storage 00:06:49 but you can always mount 00:06:50 that separately, I believe. 00:06:51 So downloading and 00:06:52 extracting that flash zip file, 00:06:55 you're left with a pile of files. 00:06:57 So if we have a look 00:06:58 at those extracted files 00:06:59 that I've got here, let's go 00:07:01 into here, you got a couple. 00:07:03 All the one that we're really gonna need 00:07:04 is that update.image. 00:07:07 So we have this upgrade tool 00:07:09 and you can use this or RK Dev tool. 00:07:12 The instructions are in here. 00:07:14 So image flashing, here we go. 00:07:16 You can see all the different platforms 00:07:18 and how to flash it. 00:07:20 Now I am using the update tool 00:07:23 which I have copies in here as well. 00:07:24 So on my GitHub repo, I do 00:07:26 put some of my own images up 00:07:27 and I will be putting 00:07:28 another one up for this 00:07:29 but in the Linux folder, you can see I've 00:07:31 got the upgrade tool 00:07:31 and the RK flash script 00:07:33 if you want it to save 00:07:34 downloading the whole SDK 00:07:35 because it does 00:07:36 actually unfortunately say 00:07:38 that it needs to 00:07:39 download the SDK to get it 00:07:41 but stuff that if we go upgrade tool LD, 00:07:44 we can't see it connected 00:07:45 because it is still over here. 00:07:47 I will grab this from there, 00:07:51 plug it back into the computer. 00:07:53 There we go. 00:07:55 What I forgot that we 00:07:56 need to do is hold down 00:07:57 the boot button whilst we connect it. 00:08:00 So that's gonna put it in the mode 00:08:01 where we can flash it with a new image. 00:08:03 And I usually just hold it 00:08:04 for two or three seconds. 00:08:05 Once that's done, we can 00:08:07 go back to the computer 00:08:08 and we'll see that device is there. 00:08:11 So if we do clear that, 00:08:14 we can do upgrade tool, 00:08:18 update firmware, and then we 00:08:20 can specify this update.image. 00:08:22 So now that's gonna push that image 00:08:23 straight onto the SPI flash 00:08:25 and it's gonna reboot 00:08:26 straight away afterwards. 00:08:27 When it does, it's gonna 00:08:28 have the latest image there 00:08:29 for us to use. 00:08:31 Now, of course, you can 00:08:32 also do an SD card image 00:08:34 with the, it needs the 00:08:35 windows tool to do that. 00:08:36 So I'm gonna put an SD 00:08:37 card image up for you 00:08:39 that is a raw grab that you 00:08:41 don't need to use SD Disk Tool 00:08:42 for, you can use Balena Etcher out 00:08:44 or just the discs utility in Linux. 00:08:47 If you are wanting to do that, 00:08:49 I'd recommend coming 00:08:50 and grabbing one of these. 00:08:51 I've just got these in stock 00:08:53 and started using them myself 00:08:55 because of how damn good they are. 00:08:57 There was a review here where this bloke 00:08:59 kind of broke down every SD card 00:09:01 and had a look at what they can do 00:09:02 and how reliable they are. 00:09:04 Go have a read of it if you want. 00:09:05 But these are extremely 00:09:06 cheap and extremely fast. 00:09:08 So I got those. 00:09:09 What you may also want, 00:09:11 depending on what your 00:09:12 wifi at home is like, 00:09:13 is an external antenna for this. 00:09:15 Now that's what I've been 00:09:16 using, but you don't have to. 00:09:18 Now to connect the antennas, 00:09:20 you do wanna be pretty careful. 00:09:22 I recommend doing it 00:09:22 because I have found this 00:09:23 onboard antenna isn't too great. 00:09:25 I'm not too sure what the reason is, 00:09:27 but I've got this one here 00:09:28 and you just wanna be a little bit gentle 00:09:30 when you connect this 00:09:31 little IPEX connector 00:09:32 because they can 00:09:33 easily break off the board 00:09:34 and you probably don't want 00:09:35 it powered on like I have here. 00:09:38 Now that's all flashed. 00:09:40 And if we come back over here, 00:09:42 we can see we've got 00:09:43 our little blinking light 00:09:45 on the computer as well. 00:09:46 If we again go ADB 00:09:47 shell, we are straight in. 00:09:49 Now I did say I had four of 00:09:51 these to give away for free 00:09:53 and thank you to 00:09:54 Luckfox for sending them. 00:09:55 To do so, all you need to do is buy one 00:09:58 with anything else from my shop 00:10:00 and throw in the discount code. 00:10:02 So having a look here, 00:10:03 I'm gonna grab one of 00:10:04 these SD cards as well 00:10:05 because you'll probably want one too 00:10:06 when you see what we've got 00:10:07 coming up and the antenna. 00:10:10 And then we'll go to the Lyra 0W, 00:10:12 which is easily available 00:10:13 on the homepage at the moment 00:10:15 and marked down 00:10:15 because it's new and awesome 00:10:17 and I want everyone to have them. 00:10:18 So once you've got the 00:10:19 accessories in your card 00:10:20 along with your Lyra 00:10:21 0W and you go checkout, 00:10:23 all you have to do here is put in this 00:10:26 Lyra 0W discount code 00:10:29 and you can see it 100% discounts that. 00:10:31 Then you just pay for the 00:10:32 accessories, plus shipping 00:10:34 and it'll arrive in 00:10:34 your post box, your PO box, 00:10:36 whatever you've got in a couple of weeks. 00:10:38 Probably if you're in 00:10:39 the US a week or two, 00:10:41 but I ship out of Australia, so it's 00:10:43 subject to where you are. 00:10:45 Now, as I said, this does 00:10:47 technically support Ubuntu, 00:10:48 but they have taken it out. 00:10:50 I happen to have an older 00:10:51 version of the SDK though, 00:10:52 that still had Ubuntu in it. 00:10:54 And so I have actually 00:10:56 created an SD card image 00:10:59 with Ubuntu for this, 00:11:00 which was a little bit of work, 00:11:02 but I think is absolutely worth it. 00:11:04 Alrighty, so over here on the computer, 00:11:06 if we just go ADB shell, 00:11:08 the same as we did before, 00:11:09 we're straight back in. 00:11:10 And if we have a look at 00:11:11 the release information, 00:11:12 we can see we now have 00:11:13 this 22.04.5 environment, 00:11:16 which is a little bit more capable. 00:11:18 We still have that 00:11:19 same 6.1.99 kernel too, 00:11:22 and you'll see that we do have the same 00:11:24 resource consumption 00:11:25 and that is a tiny, tiny 00:11:27 amount of RAM to be used. 00:11:29 Now, a lot of people of course, 00:11:30 do want to join the 00:11:31 wifi and use it that way. 00:11:33 As I said, the external 00:11:34 antenna really helps, 00:11:35 but you do need to configure it too. 00:11:37 So the first thing is 00:11:38 configuring the network details 00:11:42 in this configuration file. 00:11:43 I'm using my nice secure PiFi. 00:11:46 And just so you know, 00:11:46 all of this is 00:11:47 actually in the documentation. 00:11:49 If you go to the Lyra, 00:11:51 you'll see there's a wifi 00:11:51 and Bluetooth page here. 00:11:52 For some reason I've got the Chinese one, 00:11:54 but it shows you what to do. 00:11:56 So me showing you, 00:11:57 we've modified that file. 00:12:00 We're gonna do kill all 00:12:01 minus nine wpa_supplicant, 00:12:04 just to terminate 00:12:05 that background process. 00:12:06 And then we're gonna run it again. 00:12:07 So wpa_supplicant minus 00:12:10 capital B for background, 00:12:11 minus I to specify the WLAN0 interface, 00:12:14 minus C to then give it that config file. 00:12:18 That takes a quick second 00:12:19 and we'll see that we 00:12:20 have this interface up now, 00:12:22 but it doesn't have an address. 00:12:23 So you do also need 00:12:24 to do dhclient WLAN0. 00:12:27 Now, if you're still in 00:12:28 the Buildroot environment, 00:12:30 the command you wanna use 00:12:32 is udhcpc minus IWLAN0. 00:12:35 Back here though, we 00:12:36 can see that is connected 00:12:39 and we have internet. 00:12:41 That is all you really need 00:12:43 because then you can start 00:12:43 using apps to install things. 00:12:46 One thing you might 00:12:46 have issues with though, 00:12:47 is of course systemd and resolved. 00:12:50 So always just go to name server 1.1.1.1 00:12:54 and make sure that works with a quick 00:12:55 little ping of Google 00:12:56 or something like that. 00:12:57 So we have a fully 00:12:59 working Ubuntu environment 00:13:02 with an LTS release and a 00:13:04 good kernel on a $17 device 00:13:06 that has wifi that's got 40 GPIO pins 00:13:09 that draws nearly no power. 00:13:10 This thing is just 00:13:12 phenomenal, but it still does more. 00:13:14 And that's what I'm 00:13:15 gonna have a look at now 00:13:16 and show you the last 00:13:17 awesome part of this. 00:13:19 Before I do that last bit actually, 00:13:20 I'm gonna put a little heat sink on here 00:13:22 and I think we can give 00:13:23 it a bit of a benchmark 00:13:24 and see what it's doing. 00:13:25 Again, you shouldn't 00:13:26 put that heat sink on 00:13:28 whilst it's running, but I'm done. 00:13:29 What are you gonna do? 00:13:31 Back over on the computer, 00:13:33 if we have a look over here, 00:13:34 I can go apt install 00:13:36 python3 numpy and python3 psutil. 00:13:40 We're gonna need these for 00:13:41 a little benchmark script 00:13:42 that I've written. 00:13:44 Back in my GitHub repo, 00:13:45 if we have a look here, 00:13:47 I've got one called ML 00:13:49 accelerator benchmarks. 00:13:50 I started putting these 00:13:51 together a few months ago 00:13:52 and I haven't been keeping it up to date, 00:13:54 but it is actually pretty cool. 00:13:56 The idea is to be able 00:13:57 to benchmark small devices 00:13:58 where Geekbench might not run. 00:14:00 And I'm starting to 00:14:01 store some results in here. 00:14:02 You can see I actually ran 00:14:04 this already a few days ago, 00:14:06 but I'm gonna show you 00:14:07 how to run it now as well. 00:14:08 To make it easy, I'm just 00:14:09 gonna grab the one python file. 00:14:12 We can see here, 00:14:13 we're gonna need that one 00:14:15 and we're gonna need that one. 00:14:16 I think most of the others 00:14:18 should already be on here, 00:14:19 but we will find out very shortly. 00:14:21 So let's install those. 00:14:24 Once they're installed, 00:14:25 I'll download that python file 00:14:27 and we will get Geekbench going too. 00:14:29 If you have a look at Geekbench preview, 00:14:33 I'll just type that in. 00:14:35 Version five supports 32 bit. 00:14:37 Version six requires ARM arch 64, 00:14:40 but this has the ARMHF 00:14:41 or the ARMv7 version. 00:14:44 So we'll test that out too. 00:14:47 There we go. 00:14:48 And now let's see if we're 00:14:50 missing any extra dependencies. 00:14:52 I'm hoping that's it though. 00:14:53 No, look at that, look at it go. 00:14:55 All right, it just took a leap. 00:14:56 I didn't actually 00:14:57 expect it to get this far. 00:14:58 It got up to 2048 by 2048 00:15:00 and it says it can go higher. 00:15:02 So it leaves a little bit 00:15:03 of a safety factor there, 00:15:04 gives you a bit of 00:15:05 background information. 00:15:06 It will do some warmup runs 00:15:07 and then it's gonna 00:15:07 start absolutely hammering 00:15:09 the matrix multiplication 00:15:10 to see what the performance is like. 00:15:12 I will let this finish 00:15:13 and then we'll come back 00:15:14 and we'll have a look 00:15:15 at the results of this. 00:15:18 Now, this isn't something 00:15:19 I learned in school though. 00:15:21 Unfortunately, I had to teach myself 00:15:23 and that's why I'm thankful 00:15:24 for today's sponsor, Brilliant. 00:15:26 If you wanna start 00:15:27 learning to program in Python, 00:15:28 which is consistently ranked 00:15:29 as one of the most 00:15:30 popular programming languages 00:15:31 and has gained widespread 00:15:32 use in machine learning and AI, 00:15:34 then Brilliant's programming with Python 00:15:36 is the place to start 00:15:37 and gives you hands-on 00:15:38 experience with real programs 00:15:39 and helps you to learn to 00:15:40 think like a programmer. 00:15:42 I started using Brilliant 00:15:43 before they even offered this sponsorship 00:15:45 when I wanted to sharpen 00:15:45 my circuit design skills. 00:15:47 And now my partner's using it too, 00:15:48 although she's 00:15:48 started with visual algebra. 00:15:51 Brilliant helps you build 00:15:51 your critical thinking skills 00:15:53 through problem solving, 00:15:54 not through memorizing. 00:15:55 So whilst you're building real 00:15:57 knowledge on specific topics, 00:15:58 you're also becoming a better thinker. 00:16:00 Whether on the computer or mobile, 00:16:01 diving into a new course 00:16:02 like programming in Python 00:16:04 or doing a quick practice 00:16:04 session of some algebra, 00:16:06 Brilliant is the go-to platform 00:16:07 to help you reach your learning goals. 00:16:09 To try everything that 00:16:10 Brilliant has to offer free 00:16:12 for a full 30 days, visit 00:16:14 brilliant.org/PlatimaTinkers 00:16:16 or scan the QR code on the screen 00:16:18 or just click the 00:16:18 link in the description. 00:16:20 You'll also get 20% off an 00:16:21 annual premium subscription 00:16:22 when you sign up. 00:16:24 Brilliant, learn by doing. 00:16:27 Coming back to these results, 00:16:28 what we can see here is 00:16:29 the theoretical power, 00:16:31 the final number that we wanna look at 00:16:32 that we can compare to other things. 00:16:34 There are some more details here 00:16:35 if you really wanna dive into it, 00:16:38 but this one, which 00:16:39 probably needs some commas in it, 00:16:40 is the important one. 00:16:41 So that's 169 million. 00:16:43 Doesn't sound like much, 00:16:44 but if we compare that to 00:16:46 the ESP32-P4 or an RP2350, 00:16:49 we start to see some patterns here. 00:16:51 So this one is at one million 00:16:54 and that's the ESP32-P4, 00:16:56 1.8 million I should say. 00:16:58 The MicroPython RP2350 00:17:02 was an amazing 8.3 million. 00:17:04 And as you'd expect, we'd 00:17:06 got just under one million 00:17:08 in the results for the RP2040. 00:17:10 And I included a quick breakdown of the 00:17:11 math in this one too. 00:17:13 So it is a very, very powerful device. 00:17:17 And now we can get into the last thing 00:17:19 that I wanna do with this. 00:17:20 And this is the cool bit. 00:17:21 I wanna put a display on it. 00:17:24 This is the WaveShare 00:17:25 10.1 inch DSI display. 00:17:27 I've got these in stock. 00:17:29 I think they're about 00:17:30 80 Australians, so 50 US, 00:17:31 but they are a great display. 00:17:33 They're compatible 00:17:34 with this out of the box. 00:17:35 And so we can plug it 00:17:36 in and see what happens. 00:17:37 Let me just sort that out quickly. 00:17:39 All right, that is all plugged in. 00:17:41 I'm also gonna plug in my USB receiver 00:17:45 for the keyboard and mouse. 00:17:47 Grab these over here 00:17:48 and plug the power in. 00:17:54 Now there isn't edge case 00:17:55 to do with the power timings 00:17:57 for this and you can see 00:17:58 I've hijacked the power 00:17:59 straight from the board 00:18:00 there, but nothing's happened. 00:18:01 So I'm just gonna hit reset 00:18:03 because sometimes the 00:18:04 display hasn't initialized 00:18:06 before it tries to 00:18:06 output from what I can figure. 00:18:08 We can see though, the 00:18:09 display is instantly working, 00:18:10 which is awesome. 00:18:11 This is burning Ubuntu now 00:18:12 because we still have that SD card in, 00:18:14 but even if we didn't, 00:18:15 it does the same thing 00:18:16 with the Buildroot environment as well. 00:18:20 There we go. 00:18:20 It's given us a little 00:18:21 warning about the wifi 00:18:22 and we are there. 00:18:23 So we can just go route and route 00:18:27 and we have our 00:18:28 environment much like we had before 00:18:30 when I got Doom running on this as well. 00:18:31 If you're curious, 00:18:32 check out the recent video 00:18:34 about the other Lyras, the 00:18:35 Lyra Ultra that I tried out. 00:18:38 All righty, over on the computer, 00:18:40 we have our internet working now. 00:18:42 And what's really cool 00:18:43 is this gives us an option 00:18:44 that you may not consider. 00:18:45 And that's what we can just do, 00:18:46 apt install xubuntu-desktop. 00:18:50 So that's a meta package that's got XFCE, 00:18:53 Lite DM and everything like that 00:18:55 to get going with the 00:18:55 Graphical Interface. 00:18:56 Now this is a frame buffer interface. 00:18:58 It doesn't have a GPU backing it, 00:19:01 which means it is software driven 00:19:02 and it is gonna be slow, 00:19:04 but it does give you a lot of options. 00:19:06 Now you don't have to use, 00:19:07 hit yes to start that going. 00:19:09 You don't have to use that. 00:19:11 If you have a look at 00:19:12 the documentation here, 00:19:13 they do actually have a 00:19:14 bit about the Qt environment. 00:19:16 And that's because Qt can output 00:19:18 to the frame buffer interface. 00:19:19 So any apps that you 00:19:21 can get web browsers, 00:19:22 there's forks of web browsers, 00:19:24 fork of Chromium I think, 00:19:25 that outputs straight to the frame buffer 00:19:26 and that's how I did it with Doom. 00:19:28 That though is 00:19:29 downloading and installing. 00:19:31 To skip the wait, 00:19:31 I've got one I've 00:19:32 already prepared earlier. 00:19:33 So back over here, 00:19:35 let's just pull that 00:19:36 power straight out of there. 00:19:37 We'll pop that SD card 00:19:38 straight out of there. 00:19:40 And we'll put my other one in 00:19:41 that I already 00:19:42 downloaded these files onto 00:19:43 and see something absolutely awesome. 00:19:48 Boot back up or not, 00:19:51 hit the reboot button. 00:19:53 Now we have our display. 00:19:57 There we go. 00:19:58 That is our XFCE login prompt. 00:20:00 So we have a $17 device 00:20:03 with triple core 512 mega RAM, 00:20:05 SPI flash and SD card slot, 00:20:08 three USB ports, 00:20:09 40 pin pie to header 00:20:10 that can power a 1280 by 800 DSI display. 00:20:14 That is just amazing. 00:20:16 Now this is also a touch display, 00:20:18 as you can see. 00:20:19 So if we put our password in here, 00:20:21 we can log in with touch. 00:20:23 As I said, it's still software driven. 00:20:25 So this is gonna be a laggy interface, 00:20:27 but it gives you a lot of options. 00:20:28 There is a lot of cool stuff 00:20:30 that you can do with something so cheap, 00:20:31 so powerful and so capable. 00:20:34 I love this thing. 00:20:35 I'm giving four of them away for free. 00:20:37 If you want one, go and grab it. 00:20:39 What I'm gonna do after this 00:20:40 is put the other SD card back in, 00:20:43 download Geekbench and we'll 00:20:44 benchmark it there as well. 00:20:45 So we have some 00:20:46 comprehensive benchmark results 00:20:47 of what this is actually capable of 00:20:49 without anything 00:20:49 running in the background. 00:20:50 And I'll leave this heatsink on 00:20:52 because it is doing it 00:20:53 a little bit of a favor. 00:20:55 Now lastly, I wanna 00:20:55 thank you for coming along 00:20:57 and supporting this channel. 00:20:58 If you didn't actually know though, 00:20:59 I do have a Patreon. 00:21:01 So starting at only $4 Australian, 00:21:03 about $3 US a month, 00:21:05 you can come along and 00:21:05 support these videos. 00:21:07 It would be greatly appreciated. 00:21:09 There is behind the scenes stuff. 00:21:11 There is early access with our adverts. 00:21:13 There's chat and I'll even 00:21:14 give you a bit of support 00:21:15 if you're playing with SBCs yourself. 00:21:18 But thank you for watching this video, 00:21:20 for liking, subscribing 00:21:21 and engaging if you have. 00:21:22 Thank you to the Patreons or my Patrons, 00:21:24 whatever you wanna call them for 00:21:25 supporting this channel. 00:21:27 Thank you to Brilliant 00:21:27 for this new partnership opportunity. 00:21:29 Don't forget that you 00:21:30 get a free 30 day trial 00:21:31 and 20% off a premium subscription 00:21:33 at brilliant.org/PlatimaTinkers 00:21:35 to start your learning journey today. 00:21:37 Thank you. 00:21:38 And lastly, thank you Luckfox. 00:21:40 I hope you all 00:21:41 learned something from this. 00:21:42 I hope you're doing well. 00:21:42 I look forward to hearing from you 00:21:44 and we'll see you in another week or two 00:21:45 with some more cool hardware.