Creating A Portal Radio As A Speaker For GLaDOS

This video covers my conversion of an old Bluetooth speaker into a Portal radio for GLaDOS. I cover the different steps done to achieve a USB-controllable speaker, which I can control via commands in a Java program. Sources: [COD18] Swaroop, Codrey Electronics: What is Serial Communication and How it works?; https://www.codrey.com/embedded-syste... published on 25.11.2018, page viewed on 31.07.2021, 09:33 am CET [ELE21a] electronics-notes.com: USB Standards: USB 1, USB 2, USB 3, USB 4 – capabilities & comparisons; https://www.electronics-notes.com/art... page viewed on 31.07.2021, 09:30 am CET [ELE21b] electronics-notes.com: USB Connectors Pinouts & Cables; https://www.electronics-notes.com/art... page viewed on 31.07.2021, 09:31 am CET [ELE21c] electronics-notes.com: USB Operation: Protocol, Data Transfer & Packets; https://www.electronics-notes.com/art... page viewed on 31.07.2021, 09:32 am CET [JSE21] jSerialComm: Platform-independent serial port access for Java; http://fazecast.github.io/jSerialComm/; page viewed on 31.06.2021, 09:34 am CET [SPA21] Sparkfun: Transistors; https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/... page viewed on 31.07.2021, 09:24 am CET [URI19] urikal, Thingiverse: Portal Radio; https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:372... Published on 01.07.2019, page vieded on 09.08.2021, 6:32pm CET GitHub: https://github.com/PhilippSchulzGit/P... Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:492... Chapters: 0:00 Opening Question 0:19 Greeting 0:35 Definition of Task 1:13 Required Background Knowledge 6:21 Design of Concept 9:08 Realizing the Setup 13:32 Testing The Setup And Demonstration 16:51 Results Of Tests 17:36 Conclusion 18:52 Outlook 19:29 Last Words