Tommi Laukkane's Cyberdore 2064 Blends Retro-Futurism with a Raspberry Pi Zero

Inspired by cyberpunk and the Commodore 64, the Cyberdore 2064 includes a hefty knob for easier scrolling.

ghalfacree
about 2 months ago HW101 / 3D Printing

Cloud architect Tommi Laukkanen has designed a Raspberry Pi-powered cyberdeck with a difference: the retro-futuristic Cyberdore 2064 includes a rotary input knob, alongside a compact screen, keyboard, and carry-handle.

"I'm a fan of cyberpunk genre," Laukkanen explains, "so one of the interests is to craft my own cyberdecks every now and then to help me jack into the net with a proper device. You don't end up endless social media scrolling with these device — although it does have a handy scroll wheel on the side to navigate your Mastodon feed."

If you're looking for a compact computer with retro appeal, the Cyberdore 2064 delivers. (📷: Tommi Laukkanen)

The Cyberdore 2064, brought to our attention by Adafruit, takes some design cues from the Commodore 64 microcomputer. There's the familiar power LED section, with grille-lines and a name badge — while the Commodore "chicken-head" logo is found on the device's rear. The front of the 3D-printed housing includes a compact Bluetooth keyboard beneath a compact color display — while a second screen, a small SSD1306-based OLED panel, plays a cassette-tape animation for aesthetic effect.

Inside the custom-designed 3D-printed housing is a Raspberry Pi Zero single-board computer and a Raspberry Pi Pico RP2040-based microcontroller board. The latter serves a dual purpose: the first is to run the cassette animation on the OLED display; the second is to interface with a rotary encoder, which is exposed on the side of the deck as an oversized knob.

The custom case fits a Raspberry Pi Zero SBC and a Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller. (📷: Tommi Laukkanen)

"I designed the case with Autodesk Fusion," Laukkanen explains. "I wanted to have a deck with a handle so that you can carry it around easily. I also added a place for the small display where to display a cassette animation to give a proper retro futuristic feel to the device."

Laukkanen's full write-up is available on his website; 3D print files have been published to Printables under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license.

ghalfacree

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

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