Is hackaday.com down or not working?

What happened to hackaday.com, why did the website go down and not work? Here you can see who else is having the same problem with hackaday.com, as well as possible solutions. According to our statistics, the following most often do not work: Website, Login, Account, Mobile App.

Current status: No failures

At the moment, according to our data, hackaday.com is working fine, but single failures are possible. If hackaday.com does not work for you, then report your problem and write a comment.

What to do if the site hackaday.com is not available? Try our guide.

hackaday.com outage reports in the last 24 hours

hackaday.com - error and failure reports, troubleshooting methods

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Technical information

Main page title:
Hackaday | Fresh Hacks Every Day
Protocol:
https
Status code:
200
Page size:
108.9 KB
Response time:
0.396sec.
IP:
192.0.66.96
Response headers:
server: nginx
date: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 04:17:29 GMT
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
transfer-encoding: chunked
connection: close
vary: Accept-Encoding, accept, content-type
x-hacker: If you're reading this, you should visit wpvip.com/careers and apply to join the fun, mention this header.
x-powered-by: WordPress VIP <https://wpvip.com>
host-header: a9130478a60e5f9135f765b23f26593b
set-cookie: wordpress_test_cookie=WP%20Cookie%20check; path=/
link: <https://hackaday.com/wp-json/>; rel="https://api.w.org/", <https://hackaday.com/wp-json/wp/v2/pages/136915>; rel="alternate"; title="JSON"; type="application/json", <https://wp.me/PaBn4l-zCj>; rel=shortlink
strict-transport-security: max-age=86400
x-rq: ams7 111 253 443
accept-ranges: bytes
cache-control: no-cache, must-revalidate, max-age=0, no-store
x-cache: BYPASS
DNS records:
A address192.0.66.96
ttl3600
MX exchangealt2.aspmx.l.google.com
priority20
MX exchangeaspmx2.googlemail.com
priority30
MX exchangeaspmx3.googlemail.com
priority30
MX exchangealt1.aspmx.l.google.com
priority20
MX exchangeaspmx.l.google.com
priority10
NS valuens3.wordpress.com
NS valuens1.wordpress.com
NS valuens2.wordpress.com
TXT entriesfacebook-domain-verification=ie1lkz19o2lsbploq4owagf1snbzsy
TXT entriesgoogle-site-verification=lXv4FJCKtO39C05Cy0mNT4j9zLRbWSO3GIicV4x-iQg
TXT entriesZOOM_verify_cuY_AVoeSBi4AAVJQvMu-A
TXT entriesv=spf1 include:aspmx.googlemail.com include:mailer.postageapp.com include:mailgun.org include:servers.mcsv.net ~all
TXT entriesprojects google-site-verification=RjppnbZuuM-LhJ6Xb1EGOvnZeM6xvkkMxBxGmOm7ekQ
SOA nsnamens1.wordpress.com
hostmasterhostmaster.wordpress.com
serial2008091101
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minttl300

SEO headers

h1 Hackaday
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h1 An Ode To The SAO
h1 2024 Hackaday Superconference Speakers, Round Two
h1 Tech In Plain Sight: Zipper Bags
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h2 3D Printer Swaps Build Plates To Automate Print Jobs
h2 Static Electricity And The Machines That Make It
h2 Switch Your RP2040 Between 3.3 V And 1.8 V
h1 Search
h1 Never miss a hack
h1 Subscribe
h1 If you missed it
h2 Static Electricity And The Machines That Make It
h2 Retro Gadgets: Things Your TV No Longer Needs
h2 An Ode To The SAO
h2 Tech In Plain Sight: Zipper Bags
h2 Fukushima Daiichi: Cleaning Up After A Nuclear Accident
h1 Our Columns
h2 Supercon 2023 – Going Into Deep Logic Waters With The Pico’s PIO And The Pi’s SMI
h2 Hackaday Links: September 29, 2024
h2 What’s The Deal With AI Art?
h2 Hackaday Podcast Episode 290: IPhone’s Electric Glue, Winamp’s Source Code, And Sonya’s Beautiful Instructions
h2 This Week In Security: Password Sanity, Tank Hacking, And The Mystery 9.9
h1 Featured Projects
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h2 Infrared Communication SAO
h2 Keezer (Keg/Tap/Beer) Controller
h2 G-EDM
h1 Search
h1 Never miss a hack
h1 Subscribe
h1 If you missed it
h2 Static Electricity And The Machines That Make It
h2 Retro Gadgets: Things Your TV No Longer Needs
h2 An Ode To The SAO
h2 Tech In Plain Sight: Zipper Bags
h2 Fukushima Daiichi: Cleaning Up After A Nuclear Accident
h1 Categories
h1 Our Columns
h2 Supercon 2023 – Going Into Deep Logic Waters With The Pico’s PIO And The Pi’s SMI
h2 Hackaday Links: September 29, 2024
h2 What’s The Deal With AI Art?
h2 Hackaday Podcast Episode 290: IPhone’s Electric Glue, Winamp’s Source Code, And Sonya’s Beautiful Instructions
h2 This Week In Security: Password Sanity, Tank Hacking, And The Mystery 9.9
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How to solve problems with hackaday.com

Errors on the hackaday.com website can be either on the server side or on your side (client side). If there is practically nothing to be done about errors on the server side (it remains only to wait for the site to work again), then with errors on the client side it is possible to solve the problem with the availability of hackaday.com on your own.