!Paperterm --- agk's phlog 30 Apr 2021 @ 2225 --- written on X61 while journeying among the e-wastes --- I'm married! It was a perfect day. I promise to write more soon. My Pixel Qi 10.1" PQ3QI-01 LCD display panel arrived today. It works in place of the smashed screen in the ThinkPad X230 and the smashed screens in the Toshiba NB205 and NB505 netbooks. Pixel Qi displays were used in One Laptop Per Child machines a decade ago. They are 1024x600, 60fps (much faster than e-ink), transflective (readable in direct sun with the backlight off), and promise to draw 0.5 watts with the backlight off or 2.5 watts with it on. In the X230, the LVDS cable will have to be extended and a means of affixing the display devised. The net- books accomodate it easily but are in various stages of disrepair. My dream of a cheap, low-power, rugged, small, sunlight-readable laptop on which I can do nursing coursework in the woods remains deferred. I worked out a theoretical gut and retrofit of the NB205 case with new innards. Here are specs of an imaginary thing which I might try to build before the baby is born: * No fan, no touchpad, no camera, no mic, no speakers, no headphone jack. * 2-4 W of power consumption; 6-12 hours of active use on battery; under 2 lbs; rugged; 8.5 in x 10.5 in. * Keyboard + power button; 802.11 WLAN + bluetooth (BLE). * Sunlight-readable display; indicator LEDs; terminal + framebuffer + 3mux. * CPU chipset agnostic; easily upgradable with cheap low- power single-board computers/displays; extendable (with a Lime SDR to serve as a cellular base station/PBX). If I build the thing, I'll call it the Ship of Theseus. The bill of materials includes: * $10 Raspberry Pi Zero W (1GHz single-core ARM CPU, 512MB RAM, WLAN, BLE, 2x USB, 1x HDMI, 0.8W power draw, 65 x 30 x 5mm dimensions). * $25 Teensy++ 2.0 microcontroller (8 bit, 8-16 MHz RISC, 2.7-5.5v OTG, 51 x 15 x 5mm) to interpret key- strokes via Frank Adams' keyboard scanner board, and control screen brightness and power on/off button presses via $10 power control latch. * $20 VGA controller board for LCD from NJYtouch (3.3v barrel connector, requires MtM mHDMI to VGA cable). * Two or three Buck voltage regulators ($15) and some cables. If I'm doing my math right, this would all cost under $100, fit in the netbook case, and meet my specs. ---- Notes: ---- This sort of device has long been an interest of mine. I'm currently inspired by modularity of MNT Reform laptop, project definitions of PaperTerm and Steve Lord's heirloom computing, and hacks of Frank Adams' Pi Teensy Laptop.