Browse by interest

Tech & Digital

3D printing, drones, electronics, home automation, custom keyboards — hobbies where the rabbit hole is real and the wrong first purchase costs a few hundred dollars. These beginner guides cover the entry-level kit that actually works out of the box, and the upgrade path most newcomers take next once they know what they actually want to build.

1 guide in this family

Words you'll hear

Tech & Digital glossary

Vocabulary from the maker space, the keyboard subreddit, and the FPV freestyle channel. A lot of these are acronyms hiding much simpler things.

Bed leveling 3D printing
Adjusting the print bed so the nozzle sits at the right distance everywhere — usually a sheet-of-paper thickness. Skip it and the first layer fails, which means the print fails.
Brim 3D printing
A flat single-layer skirt printed around a model's base to anchor it to the bed and prevent warping. Cheap insurance for finicky prints.
Cherry MX Keyboards
The dominant mechanical switch family, with color codes describing feel: Red (linear, smooth), Brown (tactile bump), Blue (clicky and loud). The reference everyone clones.
Failsafe Drones
Automatic behavior — usually "return to home" — if the drone loses signal or battery drops critical. Configure this before your first flight, not after.
Filament 3D printing
Plastic spool that feeds the printer. PLA is the friendly beginner default; PETG is tougher; ABS is strong but warps and stinks. Store in a dry bag.
Hot-swappable Keyboards
Sockets that let you change switches without soldering. Makes mechanical keyboards a much friendlier hobby than the old desolder-resolder days.
Layer height 3D printing
Vertical thickness of each printed slice. 0.2mm is standard; 0.1mm prints look smoother but take nearly twice as long. 0.3mm is fast and ugly.
LiPo battery Drones
Lithium-polymer battery — high energy density and the powerhouse of most drones. Punctured or overcharged LiPos can catch fire; store in a LiPo-safe bag.
Slicing 3D printing
The software step (Cura, PrusaSlicer, Bambu Studio) that turns a 3D model into machine instructions — gcode — your printer understands. Most beginner problems live in slicer settings.
Switch Keyboards
The mechanism under each keycap that registers a press. Tactile, linear, or clicky — the choice is personal and the rabbit hole is deep.