What components will I need for snap fit electronics?

So I am planning on making minecraft redstone in real life and I would like to have the redstone and blocks snap together but I am not sure how to achieve this. Right now I am just 3d modeling the blocks and redstone pieces. What sort of electronics can I send power through plastic walls that will work when they are right next to each other?

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u/Real_Vipereaper — 3 days ago

Adding enclosure to blocks to hide electronics

https://preview.redd.it/ccjpawhzr0bh1.png?width=2559&format=png&auto=webp&s=1654dc9267ca17ea07e354f0ffe935ed66e402c5

Hi there, a little while back on the minecraft subreddit I found a person make a working redstone lamp with pieces of redstone that snap together so I decided to try and make the same thing just expand it a bit. I need to find a way to first close the blocks since they are going to have electronic components inside. Does anyone have any ideas how I can achieve this?

PS: the pistons on the side are references and I would use it but their topology is difficult to work with so I decided to make my own.

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u/Real_Vipereaper — 3 days ago

Electric magnets?

Hi there I have a project idea in mind where I need to send electric current through plastic pieces so I thought about using magnets. As far as I have seen there aren’t too many great options if any for tiny magnets. I’ve done what I can with researching on my own but now I’m just asking for help choosing which magnets would work best and how I would be able to use it.

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u/Real_Vipereaper — 7 days ago
▲ 2 r/it

Help breaking into the IT space

I am a information systems student I haven't graduated yet but I have until 3 years until I get my bachelors degree for it. I plan to do the comptip A+, Network+, and Security+ as well as the CCNA however I have been working in retail for 4 years almost 5 and I want to try and find a different job. Most of these jobs I have noticed are full time positions which unfortunately don't work since I am still a student but I am just looking for a way to get more experience. I have homelab experience with a raspberry pi 5 using docker containers to set up pi hole for dns filtering, Nginx Proxy Manager for reverse proxying, and Uptime Kuma for monitoring. Also I have been building and working with pcs for 6 years now. Although it doesn't seem like there is any positions where that would be helpful.

Has anyone made a similar transition while still in school? And does anyone know where to find part-time IT roles that don't require a degree or certs yet? Any advice is appreciated.

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u/Real_Vipereaper — 1 month ago