A while back I bought two of those Maclocks with the intention of modding one into a tiny Mac.
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@paulrickards
but can you make the toasters leave the left-screen and pick up (exactly) on the right? 🤔
* the first time I saw that was on an attached Two Page Monitor for SE/30 in 1990 ... and I almost fell over because someone else installed it, and the timeout was really long so it had never "kicked in"@petabites Multiple monitors was absolute magic back then.
No idea if Basillisk II supports addition displays.
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Obligatory flying toasters.
@paulrickards very cute. Almost therapeutic:)
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Obligatory flying toasters.
The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
@paulrickards Touch sensitive and "two wires" to me smells like it's literally just a bare capacitive sensor, with all the sensing smarts being on whatever it's connected to. (one wire being GND and the other being 'sense')
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
@paulrickards Capacitive touch sensor ?
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@spacehobo @paulrickards but with only two wires to the board that's tricky if it's anything other than just a pair of pads for a touch sensor.
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
@paulrickards does it just function like a momentary switch, by chance?
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
@paulrickards if not touch capacitive, could be an IR led & photoresistor in series. The toucher reflects the IR back, reducing the resistance and increasing the circuit's current flow. Not sure if that could be measured over just two wires going to a Pi's GPIO pins. This method of "touch" sensing probably needs more signal processing than capacitive touch, but it's not the worst way to do it

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Obligatory flying toasters.
@paulrickards I’m looking forward to my über-portable AIR router project once my Maclock arrives. I also bought a pre-made-but-3D-printed-case mini Mac to maybe shortcut things.
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Two tiny Macs, my converted one and an unmodified Maclock.
Are there any instructions on how to do it?
I mean the maclock mod, not installing the emulator on the Pi.Thanks!
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Are there any instructions on how to do it?
I mean the maclock mod, not installing the emulator on the Pi.Thanks!
@alexshendi Just what you see in this thread. Also worth looking at the #TinyMac tag.
I used this Waveshare 2.8” DPI display for Raspberry Pi.
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@alexshendi Just what you see in this thread. Also worth looking at the #TinyMac tag.
I used this Waveshare 2.8” DPI display for Raspberry Pi.
It's connected via HDMI, not SPI, right?
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It's connected via HDMI, not SPI, right?
@alexshendi Neither, this one uses DPI via the GPIO pins.
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Two tiny Macs, my converted one and an unmodified Maclock.
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More #TinyMac progress. Wired up some smol speakers to a smol audio amp.
Designed and printed a volume knob in the style of the original to fit the B50K pot. Biggest issue is how to mount it inside (the amp board has no mounting holes).
The amp turns out to be too noisy, I can hear WiFi and BT traffic. Also draws about 300mA even when the volume knob is switched off.
I think I'll leave it out.
@paulrickards I found this in the datasheet for the PAM8403 amp chip. Looks like it can be put in a low power mode when not in use. It also recommends use of ferrite beads on the speaker cables to reduce RF noise.
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
Mac and TinyMac.
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Mac and TinyMac.
@paulrickards "Don't talk to me or my son ever again."
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Mac and TinyMac.
@paulrickards I really hoped this was Mac and Massive Mac.
Coming soon?
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@paulrickards I really hoped this was Mac and Massive Mac.
Coming soon?
@anthony All depends on your perspective 😆
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The top of the Maclock includes a touch sensitive area that would turn the backlight on and off, this area marked in red. It doesn’t move, it’s just plastic.
Underneath is a board that is likely difficult to remove, embedded with glue. It has two leads coming off of it.
Without seeing the board, can you theorize how it works and how it could be utilized with a Raspberry Pi GPIO?
@paulrickards Attach a Multimeter in Voltage mode (max. 20V) and press the “button” and see what happens?