Bumble Berry Pi – A Cheap DIY Raspberry Pi Handheld Cyberdeck
110 points
10 hours ago
| 7 comments
| github.com
| HN
poisonborz
9 hours ago
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> I wanted something small enough to fit into a pants pocket

I always wanted to know what kind of pants people wear who say that to this device size (see also Nintendo DS & co)

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rtaylorgarlock
6 hours ago
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vintage army cargo pants on right now, baggy af and ready for any 'portable' device I throw at them
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TechSquidTV
8 hours ago
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check out my Steam Deck, so portable.
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MakerSam
9 hours ago
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I wear size 36 Levi's and this one fits in my back pocket
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QuantumNomad_
6 hours ago
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That’s a risky place to put it, if you forget it’s there and sit down heh
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wkjagt
7 hours ago
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My DS XL definitely fits in my pants pockets. They're pretty loose fitting pants but not overly so.
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floundy
7 hours ago
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Either cargo pants, or their waist size is much larger than average.
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mouse_
7 hours ago
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ds (XL, even) fits in my skinny jeans
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phantasmish
5 hours ago
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IDK about pants pockets, but blazer- and sport-coat-wearing needs to make a comeback. Those hip pockets that can comfortably hold all the old pulp "pocket size" paperbacks from back in the day are so damn nice. Great for enormous modern smartphones, too.
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WillAdams
5 hours ago
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I miss the old Travelsmith shirts which had pockets sufficiently large to comfortably hold a Sony PRS-505/600 ebook reader. Since then, I did get a pair of shirts which have similarly large pockets which will accept my Kindle Paperwhite and/or Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, but really wish I'd bought more of them, and am kind of stumped for replacing them when they wear out.
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anonymousiam
6 hours ago
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It looks similar to this project: https://github.com/ZitaoTech/HackberryPiCM5

I picked one up a few months ago and I like it.

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MakerSam
5 hours ago
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Nice. Did you build your Hackberry or buy it?

The Hackberry looks awesome. I was going to build/buy one, but I wanted a slightly bigger screen and keyboard, and I also wanted to save some money by using an old 3b+ I had laying around. And I wanted to be able to build it quickly from off-the-shelf Amazon components. So all-in I think I spent ~$70 on this one, whereas the hackberry pi would have cost about double that, and then I would have had to buy the CM5 module.

Curious to hear of your experience with the hackberry - I still might consider getting one of those myself.

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Hazematman
43 minutes ago
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Curious what bigger screen and keyboard you found. I was looking for similar stuff and struggled to find larger square displays. The closest I could find was spare blackberry passports screens, but you'd have to reverse engineer the screen connector.
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999900000999
3 hours ago
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Very very cool.

Once upon a time I wrote a small script to turn a raspberry pi into a midi device. I really want to be able to make my own custom midi controller, but it's not exactly fun.

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DroneBetter
5 hours ago
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is Raspberry Pi OS entirely usable without a trackpad/mouse or does this need an external one to be connected?
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MakerSam
4 hours ago
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The Bumble Berry has a touchscreen, so if you need to use the Raspberry PI OS GUI, you can simple use your finger as a mouse pointer. I've found it works pretty well for the rare occasions that I need to start the GUI.

However, I mostly use this unit in terminal, which means I boot to terminal and only occasionally start up the GUI with startx when I need it.

I use terminal because: I'm trying to brush up on my terminal skills and most of my use-cases are covered in terminal with applications. Some of my favorite terminal applications are:

tmux - for managing multiple terminal windows nano - for writing code (occasionally I use vim) tty-clock - nice clock screen saver lynx - text based web browser. works surprisingly well on some sites like wikipedia epy - ebook reader - great for reading classic free ebooks from Project Gutenberg doom - because doom cmatrix - matrix-style screensaver - looks really cool

My main use case is for learning new code languages - it's nice to have a handheld device on me to practice writing code when I have a few minutes on me but don't have a laptop

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wg0
6 hours ago
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Anyone has a RS36 Max?
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49e9919970c66f3
7 hours ago
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thats really cool! i will consider making it myself
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stOneskull
5 hours ago
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i'd like to try making this but i don't have a 3d printer nor know someone who does. i have a feeling that if i find a service that does it, that it would cost as much for the 3d printing as for the raspberry pi itself
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squigz
4 hours ago
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A quick look at a 3D printing service shows $20 for the upper part of the case. Not too bad. But also consider looking for a 3D printer at a local library or makerspace
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