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Your iPhone now does Morse code, thanks to Google's Gboard keyboard Morse code only uses two symbols (dots and dashes), making it an easy way for people with limited mobility to communicate.
An Arduino converts Morse code characters tapped at the key into keystrokes over USB. As [voxnulla] knows, when butterflies aren’t available, real programmers drive vim with a Morse key!
If you are a ham radio operator of a certain age, you probably remember ads for “The Instructograph,” a mechanical device for learning Morse code. [Our Own Devices] has an ancient speci… ...
It may be called amateur radio, but these Morse code keys are anything but amateur.
The Tworse Key is an open design exercise in interface archaeology, that decodes the input from a classic Morse key to send twitter messages. Providing a fully self contained Twittering morse code ...
Martin Kaltenbrunner’s Tworse Key is an Arduino-powered Morse code translator that outputs your taps to Twitter.
The open-source, self-build Tworsekey interface allows users to tap short messages in Morse Code on the key, have it translated into text by the device and then update a Twitter status via the ...
Since the "Morse Code Telegraph Keyboard" plugs directly into your iPhone's keyboard, you can send dots and dashes from right within iMessage — or, for the daring, your favorite email app.
A Morse Code key is played in much the same way a concert pianist would play on a Steinway, except the result is an electronic staccato, with waveforms that criss-cross the screen like a game of pong.
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