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Mini PC

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“I have a YouTube channel, and a company called Divoom sent me a Bluetooth speaker to review,” Carter explains. “Unfortunately, I’m not a product reviewer, so I decided to make a project with it. Initially, I was hoping to make a standalone music and media player for my kitchen but, as I got further along, I realised that I’d need to remove the speaker if I wanted to fit in a display.”

- Werbung -

The item Carter received was the Divoom Ditoo Plus Retro Pixel Art Game Bluetooth Speaker. It’s a curious little thing that’s styled to look like a desktop PC and, as well as six buttons and a tiny stick to navigate its many features, it has a screen which allows users to display pixel art, play games, or view information.

Key to success

To turn this device into a PC, however, the buttons, the screen, and the speaker needed to be stripped away. Carter grabbed cutting tools and a screwdriver and began disassembling, eventually leaving just the case. He then began inserting new hardware, starting with a replacement keyboard. He happened to have a USB BlackBerry Q20 keyboard with trackpad to hand, and this fitted neatly once he trimmed the corners.

“It was simply luck that the keyboard I had on hand was such a good fit,” he says, explaining that he hid the rough edges and the surrounding board by 3D-printing a bezel. Unfortunately, the display proved trickier. “The screen I had was not a good fit,” he laments. “Although being square was a good start, the glass was too large to fit within the speaker housing.

- Werbung -

“I cut the glass with shears and covered the edge shards with a 3D-printed bezel. But cutting electronics with shears is a bit of an inside joke on my YouTube channel. It’s dumb and it’s not a method I recommend. To make the display look more like a CRT, I also shaped a piece of thermal plastic into a dome with a hair-dryer and placed it over the LCD.”

Making sacrifices

The final step was to fit a Raspberry Pi 3B computer. Again, it needed to squeeze into the case and it required removing the GPIO pins to fix on a right-angle header. This proved tricky and Carter still couldn’t create a sufficiently low profile, so he ended up cutting the bottom of the housing instead. “If I was to buy the parts, I would have used a Raspberry Pi Zero computer which would have fit better,” he says.

Even so, once assembled, the Mini PC has worked a treat. It boots up, displays the familiar Raspberry Pi OS screen, and it’s controllable via the keyboard. But if Carter worked on it again, he says he might do things differently.

- Werbung -

“The bottom cover could be designed better to fit over the Raspberry Pi computer, and the upper housing could be redesigned to include a speaker,” he says. “I could find some way of preserving the LCD’s touch sensitivity while still achieving the CRT domed look. To be honest, though, I haven’t really used it much. I kinda just built it to see if I could.”

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Written by tmedia

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