About 9,050 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Necroprinting Isn’t As Bad As It Sounds | Hackaday

    4 days ago · A mosquito has a very finely tuned proboscis that is excellent at slipping through your skin to suck out the blood beneath. Researchers at McGill University recently figured that …

  2. Supercon 2024: Killing Mosquitoes With Freaking Drones, And Sonar

    Mar 25, 2025 · Flies, on the other hand, have stubbier wings, and emit a tighter echo signal. The mosquito signal is even tighter.

  3. necroprinting – Hackaday

    4 days ago · A mosquito has a very finely tuned proboscis that is excellent at slipping through your skin to suck out the blood beneath. Researchers at McGill University recently figured that …

  4. Mosquito Laser Death Grid Is Just What It Sounds Like

    Sep 22, 2023 · Mosquito Laser Death Grid Is Just What It Sounds Like 37 Comments by: Lewin Day September 22, 2023

  5. Laser Zap That Mosquito - Hackaday

    Mar 9, 2021 · However, the paper points out that 700,000 people die each year from mosquito bites — we didn’t verify that, but according to the article that’s twice the number of people …

  6. Bug Eliminator Zaps With A Laser - Hackaday

    Jun 6, 2022 · The device uses a neural learning algorithm to identify mosquitoes flying nearby. Once a mosquito is detected, a laser is aimed at it and activated in order to “thermally …

  7. December 2025 – Page 2 – Hackaday

    4 days ago · The mosquito’s proboscis was chosen over other similar biological structures, like insect stingers and snake fangs.

  8. Blog | Hackaday | Fresh Hacks Every Day

    4 days ago · A mosquito has a very finely tuned proboscis that is excellent at slipping through your skin to suck out the blood beneath.

  9. bug zapper – Hackaday

    Jun 11, 2022 · The initial thought was that there has to be a way to detect when a mosquito hits the mesh, and use that to trigger further events — in [lmu34]’s case play a sound file and …

  10. 3d printingHackaday

    3 days ago · It’s also surprisingly strong, able to resist up to 60 kPa of pressure from the fluid squirted through it. Of course, you can’t just grab a mosquito and stick it on your 3D printer.