This article appeared about a month ago. It's pretty cool. Using an Arduino, some C and Javascript coding and a little motor control, he has the laser scanning in one axis while being moved along the other axis and producing a monochrome image.
I haven't watched the video in the Gizmodo article, I'm curious if he harvested anything from the Bluray player aside from the laser and maybe the power supply. It would probably be better to buy a stepper motor controller for this purpose than to try to repurpose one from a player, but at least you'd know that the power supply from the player would meet the laser diode's specs and you could probably tap it to provide power for the rest of your gadget.
https://gizmodo.com/blu-ray-player-scanning-laser-microscope-hack-youtube-1849914455
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/22/12/21/2245214/old-blu-ray-players-can-be-turned-into-microscopes
I haven't watched the video in the Gizmodo article, I'm curious if he harvested anything from the Bluray player aside from the laser and maybe the power supply. It would probably be better to buy a stepper motor controller for this purpose than to try to repurpose one from a player, but at least you'd know that the power supply from the player would meet the laser diode's specs and you could probably tap it to provide power for the rest of your gadget.
https://gizmodo.com/blu-ray-player-scanning-laser-microscope-hack-youtube-1849914455
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/22/12/21/2245214/old-blu-ray-players-can-be-turned-into-microscopes