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11 comments
  • The design is so geeky that I would want one, even though I don't think I have a use for it.

  • Very cool. I want one, of course, but I'm disappointed to see that they're using an off-the shelf keyboard and just re-housing it with a few extra bells and whistles bolted on. I own the keyboard that they're ripping the internals from, and let me tell you, it is not great.

    I mean I get why, of course, but it's too bad.

    Maybe ClockworkPi will release an updated uConsole that can house a Pi5. The uConsole keyboard isn't the best, but it's better than the Rii X1 Mini that Consolo looks to be using.

  • Gosh I want one!

  • this is really making me not hate my pi5 so much.

    Hope it'll be available sometime soon as a DIY kit

    • Why do you hate your Pi 5?

      I haven't switch to 5 yet, but 4B has worked well as a DIY home server (Pi-hole, NAS, media server etc.).

      • Intermittent LAN reliability issues which appear to be distro agnostic. LAN often fails after a hot boot, which is not ideal. I've spoken to several other users with the same issue but I don't believe it's widespread. A portable cyberdeck makes this less of a problem I suppose.

        Aside from this fundamental issue. I intended to buy this as an ultra low power server, only for it to be outclassed in the same power envelope as an older intel skylake-based home server platform (this was honestly quite astonishing, though the server was 2.2x more expensive all in all).

        A minor bonus is that we didn't have to fiddle with box86/64/fex-emu. Fex-emu and box* are remarkable projects and I don't mean to hold the arm ISA against the Pi as a negative, but it ended up being much more convenient for our case.

        I'm also kind of fed up waiting for the rest of the board support to be upstreamed but that's more my fault for being an early-ish adopter.

11 comments