CS-Lab has released a firmware update for its in-house 68060-based Warp accelerator boards. This is explicitly just a release candidate of version 2.025 for now; users are strongly advised to back up their operating system beforehand.

In addition to bug fixes, the new features include for example support for the Warp 7060, overheating protection and the ability to set the clock via P96 settings.

https://www.amiga-news.de/en/news/AN-2026-05-00075-EN.html

#Amiga #hardware #firmware #Warp #accelerator

amiga-news.de - CS-Lab: Warp firmware pack 2.025 (RC)

I was reflecting on 3D printer motion algorithms and I remembered this image from a Trinamic video. Klipper uses trapezoidal, RRF & Marlin can do S-Curve and the new Prunt firmware can be even smoother! Taking a step back, it seems that we are prioritizing the wrong development by working on filters like input shaping or pressure advance. What do you thing?

➡️ Read more on my blog:
https://ekunn.com/blog/2026/05/17/reflecting-on-motion-algorithms/

#3dprinting #klipper #marlin #RRF #firmware #motion

ESP32-S3 boards feature WAGO connectors for LED strips, buttons, other swappable modules

Rev Adrian Kennard (RevK) has designed several open-source hardware ESP32-S3 WiFi and Bluetooth IoT boards with WAGO connectors for interfacing LED strips, buttons, and other GPIO modules. Initially developed for the gloves and the helmet of an Iron Man suit, the ESP32-S3 boards can be used for any relevant project that needs more flexibility than soldered modules and more reliability than GPIO headers or even screw terminals, which can be susceptible to vibrations. WAGO push-in connectors make the ESP32-S3 boards especially suitable for prototyping and wearables, where being able to quickly swap modules is beneficial. The first board designed for gloves is called "Battery powered controller development board" with the following specifications: Core module – ESP32-S3-MINI-1-N4-R2 SoC – ESP32-S3 dual-core Xtensa LX7 processor with WiFi 4 and Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity Memory – 2MB PSRAM Storage – 4MB QSPI flash PCB antenna USB - 1x USB-C for power and programming Expansion

CNX Software - Embedded Systems News
🔒 CVE-2026-46728 (HIGH, CVSS 8.2) in denx U-Boot <2026.04 lets local privileged attackers bypass FIT signature checks due to hashed-nodes omission. Restrict local access & watch for patches. https://radar.offseq.com/threat/cve-2026-46728-cwe-346-origin-validation-error-in--fd4fda20 #OffSeq #Uboot #Infosec #Firmware

🚨 NEWS: Analogue 3D Introduce il Salvataggio Istantaneo: Una Rivoluzione per il Retrogaming su N64

Ecco i punti chiave in breve:
💡 La console retro Analogue 3D, basata su tecnologia FPGA e progettata per riprodurre fedelmente i giochi Nintendo 64, ha ricevuto un aggiornamento firmware che cambia radicalmente l...

🚀 LINK: https://meteoraweb.com/news/analogue-3d-introduce-il-salvataggio-istantaneo-una-rivoluzione-per-il-retrogaming-su-n64

#firmware #retrogaming #fPGA #analogue3D #salvataggioIstantaneo

You are basically paying $12 to let anyone on the internet ring your doorbell.

Bought a cheap Temu smart doorbell, dumped the BK7252N firmware over UART, and worked out how to take over any unit on the platform, hijack live calls, and exfiltrate the owner's WiFi password.

Responsible disclosure sent. Sensitive specifics withheld.

https://www.abgeo.dev/blog/anyone-can-ring-your-doorbell/

#iot #security #firmware

Anyone on the Internet Can Ring Your Doorbell

Behind a cheap Temu doorbell sits an IoT backend where device IDs are sequential and requests are forgeable with a string baked into every firmware. One signed call lifts any device's persistent password and lets anyone on the Internet hijack the next live call.

ABGEO's Personal website
Hacking Hard Drive Firmware

You probably flash new firmware on a variety of devices regularly, even though that’s rare for non-technical types. But what about your hard drive firmware? Most of us don’t want to tou…

Hackaday
Hacking Hard Drive Firmware

You probably flash new firmware on a variety of devices regularly, even though that’s rare for non-technical types. But what about your hard drive firmware? Most of us don’t want to tou…

Hackaday
Hacking Hard Drive Firmware

You probably flash new firmware on a variety of devices regularly, even though that’s rare for non-technical types. But what about your hard drive firmware? Most of us don’t want to tou…

Hackaday
Exploiting the Tesla Wall Connector from its charge port connector -

Exploiting the Tesla Wall Connector from its charge port connector -

Synacktiv