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93 lines
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93 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1235
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Title: HPR1235: Talk Cyberpunk To Me
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1235/hpr1235.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 22:02:15
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---
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Hello everybody, my name is Sikflub, Sikflub is in a slobble that is, and I am here to
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talk to you about a World Book computer that I built, quote unquote, built that I constructed
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more or less, out of ready made parts.
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I was given a couple of raspberry pies, and I didn't really know what to do with them
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for a long time.
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I found a use for at least one of them, and that is in a wearable computer.
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So I have a raspberry pie in it.
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I also have a half of my view solo in there, as well as four deep batteries charging the
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whole thing in a keyboard.
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So this is what I wear.
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I wear the computer bits, the raspberry pie and the battery and why not.
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I wear the computer bits kind of like a tie, which I find is nice to have it just on
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your front, and where the my view solo parts on my eyes are on one eye rather, and I type
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on the keyboard.
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So it's pretty straightforward how this works as a wearable computer.
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I'll talk to you about a couple of things that I've learned while taking apart the
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my view solo to plot the pieces and use half of it.
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The my view solo is a heads up display that was intended for use with the iPad and the
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iPod and the iPhone and whatnot to turn its composite video out into a display that you
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had presented right in front of you through these awkward looking goggles that you'd wear.
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The awkward rockward looking goggles actually has two very tiny LCDs that they're 320
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by 240, these LCDs, and so my goal was to extract one of them, because I wanted a sort
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of a monical, I thought it looked a little bit more visually pleasing.
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If I had just one eye covered instead of both, so I took it apart, and it was a bit
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difficult to take apart because it's held together, the headset part of it, there are
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three parts, there's the headset part of it, there's a little oval shaped box on the
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wire of it with brightness and contrast controls and a power button, and then there's the
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part that plugs into the iPad or iPod or whatever.
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The part that plugs into the iPad or iPod or whatever is detachable, this is important,
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I'll tell you why it's important in a second.
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So I was taking apart the goggles and I didn't have torque screws, it's held together
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by four, very tiny torque screws, I didn't have a torque wrench or torque screwdriver or
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anything like that to take apart, so I very carefully wedged the whole thing apart.
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With a couple of butternives, so it's, I can't put the packaging back together, but found
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out that the inoids of it were pretty cool, the optics for the left eye and the right
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eye are connected, which is unfortunate, because I just wanted one eye, you'll find that
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the optics are connected in this little box with the LCDs on either side, you can just
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go ahead and cut that box right in half, there's nothing really inside of it, and that's
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exactly what I did was I cut in half and used only one side of it for my iPads.
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The only, the unfortunate part about taking this part I found was that, so you have LCDs
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on either side of the optics and LCDs on either side of the optics, and these are, what
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illuminates the screen is LEDs behind the LCDs, and I found that these LEDs are connected,
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you can't disconnect one and have the other one work, unfortunately, so I kept one connected
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and kind of hit it by the earpiece, and because I suppose they're in series in some way or
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something like that, another problem with the, might be solo, is you can't power it
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constantly with the external source without it charging, if you, the part that has a little
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oval with the contrast and brightness controls, has a tiny battery inside of it, and also
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has a USB plug, you charge it with the USB plug, and it charges the battery, but you can't
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turn it on, it'll turn on for a few seconds and turn off and discover that the battery's
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there and charge it, so if you just remove the battery, then you can charge it with an
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external source, so that's what I did was remove the battery, the part that connects the
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iPod or iPad or whatever actually disconnects, and there's a stereo plug, well it's not
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stereo, there's three tips in a shield, so it's one source more than stereo, so it's a
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triple or something like that, I don't know what you call it, but it's this plug, and I found
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that the first two tips is the audio, the next tip is the AV ground, and the shield, for
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some other reason the shield is video, which is kind of odd, that's the way they made it,
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and you can connect this to any NTSC or PAL video source, I chose the NTSC video out of
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my Raspberry Pi, and it works quite well, although you can't really see anything because it's
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320x240 display, I'll talk about that in a second, I'll actually talk about that now, I
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wrote a terminal emulator for it that kind of zooms into what you're typing, and zooms
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in around the screen, so you can actually see what's going on, and that link is in the
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show notes, and runs, not quite as smooth on the Raspberry Pi, it doesn't a normal computer,
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but it's smooth enough, so far it still has yet to be optimized, terribly much, I mean
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it's algorithmically optimized, I think, but it can use some arm-ish assembly in there
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and its inner loops for a little bit more optimization, so on to power, the entire thing is powered
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by 4D cell batteries, I powered the Raspberry Pi directly, the Raspberry Pi has a little
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5 volt regulator attached very closely to its power source, and so you can go over and
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under the target voltage, and target amperage a little bit without disturbing the Raspberry
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Pi too much, and so the 6 volts that I draw out of the D batteries is enough to power
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the Raspberry Pi, then I powered the MyView, and the other per hit fields, the wireless keyboard
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and whatnot, through the USB plugs, and yeah, so that's it, that's my little wearable computer,
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it's been very nice, I've been wearing it around town, with a little keyboard, and gotten
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mixed reactions from it, I think it's still socially in acceptable to have a screen attached
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to you, unfortunately this is, it's a screener smaller, I think it would be a little bit more
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socially acceptable, but there's a certain click of people that find it really interesting, I've
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not found, so yeah, that's it, thanks for listening everyone, take care, bye-bye.
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