cab404/buttplug-hello — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-18 · repo last pushed 2021-02-07
Learn the basic steps for connecting to a networked hardware device using Buttplug.
Use as a starting template for building an application that controls specialized hardware.
Reference a minimal working example instead of reading Buttplug's full API docs in isolation.
Build accessibility or automation software that needs to send commands to connected devices.
| cab404/buttplug-hello | 0xr10t/pulsefi | 404-agent/codes-miner | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | — | 0 | 0 |
| Language | Rust | Rust | Rust |
| Last pushed | 2021-02-07 | — | — |
| Maintenance | Dormant | — | — |
| Setup difficulty | moderate | hard | moderate |
| Complexity | 2/5 | 4/5 | 3/5 |
| Audience | developer | developer | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
README lacks detail, requires reading the actual source code to understand the implementation.
A minimal Rust example project showing how to connect to and control networked hardware devices using the Buttplug library.
Mainly Rust. The stack also includes Rust, Buttplug.
Dormant — no commits in 2+ years (last push 2021-02-07).
Setup difficulty is rated moderate, with roughly 1h+ to a first successful run.
Mainly developer.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
double-check against the repo, no cap.