TL;DR: The TRS-80 Model 100[1] indeed looks closer than the AlphaSmart!
If something like that TRS had e-ink, it might be what I'd had in mind. If you're familiar with the idea of the OLPC hardware[2], like that except:
* More durable
* Lower power
* E-ink
* Not effectively vaporware
On a related note, I heard Pixel Qi[3] displays were interesting. However, the company folded. Some panels seem to pop up for sale now and then, but my understanding is they're effectively obsolete.
> The recent Clockwork-PI evokes it - but the keyboard is a toy
That's a shame.
> it’s just a Linux laptop with all the distractions therein
After taking a look at the device, this seems like an understatement. The Clockwork-PI[4] looks like it's mostly an emulation machine. For anyone who doesn't want to click through, it's a Game Boy form factor with a few extra buttons and a keyboard below the D-pad.
To be fair to the device, I think it's different class of device. It also fills some very specific niches:
1. Prototyping for GB/GBC games on higher-power hardware and higher-level languages
2. A decent front-end attached sensors if you can use USB
As example of #2: Mapping WiFi signal strength. Walking around a building holding a clunky laptop while someone else held the antenna wasn't fun. It was what we had to work with given the deadline, but if I had to do it often, I might want something like the Clockwork PI if someone could source better keyboards.
Just to be clear - I was referring to what they call the “Devterm”[1] with the wide screen and toy keyboard. They even sell it in a color scheme that matches the Model 100 - and it has a built in printer like the Epson (? Something-20) if that era.
If something like that TRS had e-ink, it might be what I'd had in mind. If you're familiar with the idea of the OLPC hardware[2], like that except:
* More durable
* Lower power
* E-ink
* Not effectively vaporware
On a related note, I heard Pixel Qi[3] displays were interesting. However, the company folded. Some panels seem to pop up for sale now and then, but my understanding is they're effectively obsolete.
> The recent Clockwork-PI evokes it - but the keyboard is a toy
That's a shame.
> it’s just a Linux laptop with all the distractions therein
After taking a look at the device, this seems like an understatement. The Clockwork-PI[4] looks like it's mostly an emulation machine. For anyone who doesn't want to click through, it's a Game Boy form factor with a few extra buttons and a keyboard below the D-pad.
To be fair to the device, I think it's different class of device. It also fills some very specific niches:
1. Prototyping for GB/GBC games on higher-power hardware and higher-level languages
2. A decent front-end attached sensors if you can use USB
As example of #2: Mapping WiFi signal strength. Walking around a building holding a clunky laptop while someone else held the antenna wasn't fun. It was what we had to work with given the deadline, but if I had to do it often, I might want something like the Clockwork PI if someone could source better keyboards.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRS-80_Model_100
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLPC_XO
[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pixel_Qi
[4]: https://www.clockworkpi.com/