Event JSON
{
"id": "daf35228b516aa9de9b08aa25ec4a87e1b62b9cb46bc65edfd005b8afa0549e3",
"pubkey": "d30ea98ea65e953f91ab93f6b30ea51eb33c506f87d49f600a139aef00aa9511",
"created_at": 1727046654,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"RaspberryPi"
],
[
"t",
"raspberrypi"
],
[
"t",
"QubesOS"
],
[
"t",
"qubesos"
],
[
"t",
"security"
],
[
"t",
"Qubes"
],
[
"t",
"qubes"
],
[
"t",
"infosec"
],
[
"t",
"electronics"
],
[
"t",
"maker"
],
[
"r",
"https://image.nostr.build/ff7ee1f37abf670c5f08308ad1b5acc9307490015301873c6505e8cc9522097f.jpg"
],
[
"imeta",
"url https://image.nostr.build/ff7ee1f37abf670c5f08308ad1b5acc9307490015301873c6505e8cc9522097f.jpg",
"m image/jpeg",
"alt Two cables are coiled on a wooden desk, both plugged into a mysterious electronic device. One cable is a USB-A to USB-micro connector. The other is a PS/2 cable. The electronic device is a stack of two PCBs, one green and the other is purple. There is a wire going across the top of the purple board. Upon closer inspection, the PS/2 cable appears to be taped together.",
"x 8fc900a0e91ce195ce9609255cf42c569257a1d2ac96f21ec9bd10f0eaed8eee",
"size 332222",
"dim 1440x1920",
"blurhash _HK1XS%2%MM|bIt6og~qRkxtRkRjoeWB?Gt7xZofWAjsWAx]t6M_bHs-WBoe~VM{4:kCNHWVbIxrIVf8xtR-ofWX9Zoej[ocs.ays.WAs:oga{WBRjoJM|j]%1WBjtWVay",
"ox ff7ee1f37abf670c5f08308ad1b5acc9307490015301873c6505e8cc9522097f"
]
],
"content": "This is the first functional prototype of a custom #RaspberryPi Pico hat that will convert any USB keyboard and/or mouse to PS/2.\n\nhttps://image.nostr.build/ff7ee1f37abf670c5f08308ad1b5acc9307490015301873c6505e8cc9522097f.jpg\n\nThe reason I want one is so I can use modern keyboards with #QubesOS and not have to expose dom0 to any USB devices, ever! This is a #security feature shich I've wrote about previously and #Qubes has documented well.\n\nAs the picture implies, the PBC design was missing a trace, which I've patched with that red wire. I also had to cut the PS/2 cable apart and make it into a \"crossover\" cable to compensate for my having the pins reversed on the Mini-DIN-6 connector (I had it wired like a cable instead of a jack).\n\nI've updated the PCB design to fix all these things (and some more minor issues) in case anyone else is interested in buying or building one of these little gems.\n\nI am an #infosec #electronics #maker, hear me roar.",
"sig": "2acd35c827b06ed3b0e0923a44b650f56161851247d93ca22d7c5ba06e01aba71f4245c477fbd68d861b76c279764a3ca0d010e81a69dd7ec5c01b3bbe4cd9d7"
}