Inkplate-6-hardware
tinydrm
Inkplate-6-hardware | tinydrm | |
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4 | 1 | |
168 | 83 | |
1.8% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 3 years ago | over 4 years ago | |
C | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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Inkplate-6-hardware
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New life to old Kindles (just the screen)?
They figured out the protocol for Kindle screens and designed a platform around them. The schematics and hardware design are on github as is the Arduino software, so if you want to play around with a screen you already have then that should supply all the info you need.
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Is it viable/possible to build your own E-Ink tablet?
Hardware design & schematics
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Making your own e-paper dashboard for home from scratch
See also https://inkplate.io/, which is a Wi-Fi-enabled display made from recycled Kindles (GitHub repo is here: https://github.com/e-radionicacom/Inkplate-6-hardware)
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CutiePi – thinnest Raspberry Pi 4 tablet
The Inkplate 6 works pretty well - I am using it for my digital picture frame. The only disappointing thing for me is, that they haven't released the actual source files (Eagle, Kicad, etc..) for the hardware yet. [1]
[1] https://github.com/e-radionicacom/Inkplate-6-hardware/issues...
tinydrm
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CutiePi – thinnest Raspberry Pi 4 tablet
A friend & I have a dream of building an E-reader based on the 10" ED097OC4 E-ink display that was built into the Kindle DX and can now be had for around 30€ (old stock?).
Most parts of the stack are conceptually figured out:
A Pine64 SOPINE module (comparable to the Raspi CM, but cheaper), a Linux DRM driver based on tinydrm (https://github.com/notro/tinydrm) or gud (https://github.com/notro/gud/), as panel driver either vroland's ESP32 based EPDiy (https://hackaday.io/project/168193-epdiy-976-e-paper-control...) or a custom FPGA solution.
What's really missing and what I just can't figure out is how to get a touch input layer on there. Because the format is so weird there's just nothing available off the shelf at a fitting size. Cutting them to size doesn't seem feasible (or is it?), perhaps the most DIYable would be an infrared solution (like early kindles have), but on that topic there's a distinct lack of DIY materials.
A button-only navigation would really suck, since even KOReader (the absolute minimum application to run, preferable would be a full Wayland desktop) doesn't seem to be compatible with that.
I figure this is the best place to ask: Does anyone have an idea how this could be solved? Also, would anyone be interested in E-reader kits like that?
What are some alternatives?
cutiepi-board - Open source hardware design for the CutiePi tablet
cutiepi-shell - A mobile shell for Raspberry Pi OS
The-Open-Book
kindle-dash - Power efficient dashboard for Kindle 4 NT devices
kindle-weather-dashboard
Inkplate-Arduino-library - Inkplate family Arduino library. The easiest way to add e-paper to your project.
iot