Sortimo T-Boxx (or similar). I have rack with a stack of 12 of them labeled by component type.
The nice things about these is that you can see what is inside them before you have to open them.
I love to grab a few of them (eg: 'Soldering', 'MCU's', 'Resistors'), bring them to my workbench and start doing stuff while the components stay neatly sorted within the organizer instead of spreading around my bench. When done, close the lid, shove them back in the rack and I'm done.
I have to warn that it sounds like hot garbage though. The neat thing with ESP32 devices is that you can make it sound okay using its built in 8-bit DACs, or great using I²S.
Speaking of hardware hacking; you can also get POE/LAN adaptors for the ESP32, if you have free hardware pins left for it.
+1 for the hot garbage piezo, but as OP says the ESP32 has a lot of fun hacking potential and there's plenty of space in the case especially if you remove the battery.
Maintaining sender reputation is tough and I don't think anyone in their right mind should try this in house. If you're not a M3AAWG member, you'll probably hit a brick wall when trying to explain to Google why your whole IPV4 block is erroneously on a blocklist.
Not sure about "most skilled", as there are some very good machinist with skills in different areas. I'd say he's definatley the most patient, learning and explaining ancient methods and every step along the way. And the videos are certainly of the most visually appealing.
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