Adam Blumenberg's Digital Typewriter Is a Raspberry Pi-Powered Beast of Distraction-Free Writing

Built in a plywood box disguised with decoupage, this battery-powered text-entry terminal is inspired by AlphaSmart's products.

ghalfacree
about 2 years ago HW101

Physician and self-described "tinkerer" Adam Blumenberg has turned a Raspberry Pi into a distraction-free digital typewriter, taking inspiration from a classic of the classroom.

"I write a lot," Blumenberg explains, providing as evidence an impressive bibliography of published papers on the topics of toxicology, emergency medicine, software, and more. "I wanted a distraction free digital typewriter with nice clacky mechanical keys and a thin wide screen."

This ultra-wide "digital typewriter" was built for distraction-free writing using FocusWriter or LibreOffice. (📷: Adam Blumenberg)

Blumenberg's inspiration, though, comes not from the mechanical typewriter directly but from a device which may be familiar to those who came up through the education system relatively recently: the AlphaSmart Neo 2. Launched in 2007 as a successor to the AlphaSmart Neo, the Neo 2 was the last in a line of distraction-free writing devices which stored students' work in an internal memory for later transfer to a more powerful desktop or laptop.

Like the AlphaSmart, Blumenberg's Raspberry Pi 4 Model B-powered typewriter stores articles — written in the concentration-boosting FocusWriter or more general-purpose LibreOffice Writer — in its internal memory, for later transfer to a general-purpose computer using a simple USB drive "sneakernet" system.

The machine is powered by a hidden Raspberry Pi 4 Model B single-board computer (SBC). (📷: Adam Blumenberg)

"It's made out of plywood," Blumenberg writes of the machine's hefty housing, which hosts the single-board computer, ultra-wide display, and a mechanical keyboard, "and I rapidly [realized] that carpentry is hard, so I covered the lopsidedness and stray nails with decoupage. It's fun to write with and works as intended."

More information on the project is available on Blumenberg's Hackaday.io page.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

Latest Articles