Hacker turns Kindle Paperwhite into wireless Raspberry Pi terminal

Hacker turns Kindle Paperwhite into wireless Raspberry Pi terminal

The Raspberry Pi is all about low-cost computing, which makes this particular hack quite fitting, as it allows you to make a terminal for your lil' Linux machine out of something you may already have at home: a Kindle Paperwhite. Displeased with the glare from his laptop's screen on a sunny day, Max Ogden was inspired to find something better and ended up with this Paperwhite hack. It builds on the original "Kindleberry Pi" method for the Kindle Keyboard, although Ogden had to massage it for the newer model and added some extra hardware to make the setup as wireless as possible. You wouldn't call the end result a monitor, as such -- the Paperwhite logs into an SSH session running on the Pi, so it "pretty much only works for terminals." That's probably for the best, as Ogden guesses the lag between wireless keyboard and e-ink screen is around 200ms, but at least it has portability, battery life and sunlight readability in the 'pros' column. Details of the project can be found at the source below, meaning only time (and probably, a few peripherals) stands between you and the ultimate hipster coffee shop machine.

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Via: Raspberry Pi

Source: Max Ogden

Amazon: the Kindle Keyboard is sticking around

Old habits can be hard to break, and while Amazon made the point pretty clear that it's shifted toward a world of touch controls on its devoted e-readers, the company hasn't completely abandoned the Kindle Keyboard. The reader formerly known as the Kindle 3 is still available on Amazon's page in its 3G form and will continue to be so, at least for the time being, at $139 for the Special Offers version and $189 without. An Amazon spokesperson told us that part of the justification for continuing the offering is the device's accessibility features.

Amazon: the Kindle Keyboard is sticking around originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 17:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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