FPGA
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Stuff A Lot Of Brute Power On Your FPGA To Crack A MD5 Password
In today´s article we present a project developed by students of the University of Illinois. This guy and his partner used the parallel power of the FPGA to create a hardware system which basically consisted of 16 MD5 cracking units-which were able to produce more than 700 million hashes per minute-, a keyboard control system…
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How To Control A LCD TFT Using Your FPGA (Or Someone Else´s)?
Not long ago, we published some articles about controlling different kinds of displays, using your FPGA. On a VGA screen, on a small LCD screen, on a PSP LCD or even for the old, but nasty-analog-signaled NTSC system. And today, we share with you another great tutorial on how to control a LCD TFT, that…
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Create A Particle Dynamics Simulator With Your FPGA
Today´s article presents a very detailed project of a Cornell student who wanted to play with Pyro Sand Game. He did not want his laptop to overheat due to high power consumption, the fan to go crazy or the screen to freeze up once a lot of particles were on screen. To solve this he…
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How To Use Your FPGA To Display Things On A PSP Screen!
Welcome back to the track of using your FPGA to display things. Today´s tutorial will teach you how to use the LCD screen of a PSP to display colour graphics from an FPGA. The main goal is to show three colour stripes on the screen but the author goes beyond that and adds a quick…
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Use Your FPGA To Build A Password Cracker!
Here we have a project developed by a German guy who wanted to get a 100 EUR device that could do 10 million key guesses per second. The main point of this design is to use multiple crypt cores in order to reduce the time needed to crack a UNIX Crypt. A modified DES…
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Build Your Own Vacuum Robot With Your FPGA!
This is the first part of the series for building up your own robot, that is fully capable of swallowing up the dust of your room. The first thing you need to build is a fully functional robot that moves independently around your room and that can stop at every obstacle. Well, you have it.…
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Use You FPGA To Bring The BBC Back To Life!
BBC is the short name for the Acorn BBC Micro, which was very popular in the mid-to-late 80s. There were several versions of this computer but the one that has been revived in this project is the BBC B. The core of this device was the famous 6502 processor. This article thoroughly defines each part…
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