D13Fd 18 minutes ago

This looks nice but the “custom everything” approach sounds awful. Over time one of the custom software components will break and the amount of time you spend fixing it will likely ultimately outweigh the benefit of the calendar in the first place.

TrueGeek 5 hours ago

The InkyFrame is nice but I prefer the eInk frame from HN user konschubert:

https://www.invisible-computers.com

  • piyuv 4 hours ago

    This is so cool. But I think they’re 2 different devices: aimed at end users vs hackers/tinkerers.

  • omnimus 3 hours ago

    Shame they only have that wood version. Looks kinda cheap and not tasteful. I guess one can paint it.

  • drcongo 5 hours ago

    Oooh thanks. That's my wife's birthday present sorted if the 10" version comes back into stock.

smikhanov 3 hours ago

    If you’ve got a busy schedule, then it’s all too easy to become overwhelmed.
This is why they want to interest you in something that is not assembled into a finished product, but presented as a bunch of PCBs, and relies on a custom self-hosted Python server for which one can "always choose to add different sources by editing the Python code on the server".
  • NoboruWataya 3 hours ago

    For many people, assembling things like this is a hobby, and spending time on hobbies is actually quite important to avoid becoming overwhelmed by a busy schedule.

  • rv3392 2 hours ago

    That's the point though? They're trying to show off the functionality of the display/board to interest you in using it for a side project (might not even be a calendar).

    Pimoroni's entire target market is hobbyists, educators and people who want to do bespoke things with electronics. They're not interested in buying finished products because they either enjoy working on projects or it would be too limiting for their needs or both.

    If you just want a finished product buy one of the other countless e-ink calendar displays that exist.

  • brokensegue 3 hours ago

    It does come fully assembled?

    • extra88 3 hours ago

      All the electronic components are surface mounted to the PCB but that doesn't make it a finished product.

      They've made the PCB about as nice-looking as one can but most people still wouldn't want it that way; the raw buttons on the front in particular are not a good look or feel. There's no stand and the only mounting solution provided is a hole in the board. Power appears to be through the Pico's USB port on the side.

      • rv3392 2 hours ago

        The expectation is that anyone looking at Pimoroni products will probably just 3D-print (or produce in some other way) a case. They're not trying to sell this as a finished product.

        • extra88 an hour ago

          Sure, I was just elaborating on why "fully assembled" does not mean "finished product" to most people.

polivier an hour ago

I'm personally a fan of MagicMirror [1] which is pretty much a turnkey solution for this problem. I have one set up on an old Raspberry Pi connected to a spare wall-mounted monitor. What I love with MagicMirror is that it's a modular system, where you choose which modules you want to have and where to display them. I only use it to display a shared calendar with my wife, along with the week's weather. But there are a few hundred modules, with things like displaying your expected commute time (based on Google maps I think), integrations with some apps like AnyList, etc.

[1] https://github.com/MagicMirrorOrg/MagicMirror

ck2 an hour ago

What's going to happen now to Pi/accessory prices with De Minimis ending and new $50 MINIMUM FEE on imports?

Best get your orders in before May 2nd?