home.social

#tanmatsu — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tanmatsu, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Some good news for #Tanmatsu owners and others who partake of the #BadgeLife - #MicroPython now kinda sorta works on the #ESP32P4 :aMarxParty:

    In case of interest, here's an MP fork with my lazyweb "port" where the only changes are basically copying the ESP-IDF settings for the Tanmatsu over into the MP source tree as a new board:

    github.com/martin-hamilton/tan

    Disclaimer: On the great Copilot In The Cloud because there are too many moving parts to cleanly slurp over elsewhere

  2. Some good news for #Tanmatsu owners and others who partake of the #BadgeLife - #MicroPython now kinda sorta works on the #ESP32P4 :aMarxParty:

    In case of interest, here's an MP fork with my lazyweb "port" where the only changes are basically copying the ESP-IDF settings for the Tanmatsu over into the MP source tree as a new board:

    github.com/martin-hamilton/tan

    Disclaimer: On the great Copilot In The Cloud because there are too many moving parts to cleanly slurp over elsewhere

  3. Some good news for #Tanmatsu owners and others who partake of the #BadgeLife - #MicroPython now kinda sorta works on the #ESP32P4 :aMarxParty:

    In case of interest, here's an MP fork with my lazyweb "port" where the only changes are basically copying the ESP-IDF settings for the Tanmatsu over into the MP source tree as a new board:

    github.com/martin-hamilton/tan

    Disclaimer: On the great Copilot In The Cloud because there are too many moving parts to cleanly slurp over elsewhere

  4. Some good news for #Tanmatsu owners and others who partake of the #BadgeLife - #MicroPython now kinda sorta works on the #ESP32P4 :aMarxParty:

    In case of interest, here's an MP fork with my lazyweb "port" where the only changes are basically copying the ESP-IDF settings for the Tanmatsu over into the MP source tree as a new board:

    github.com/martin-hamilton/tan

    Disclaimer: On the great Copilot In The Cloud because there are too many moving parts to cleanly slurp over elsewhere

  5. Some good news for #Tanmatsu owners and others who partake of the #BadgeLife - #MicroPython now kinda sorta works on the #ESP32P4 :aMarxParty:

    In case of interest, here's an MP fork with my lazyweb "port" where the only changes are basically copying the ESP-IDF settings for the Tanmatsu over into the MP source tree as a new board:

    github.com/martin-hamilton/tan

    Disclaimer: On the great Copilot In The Cloud because there are too many moving parts to cleanly slurp over elsewhere

  6. #CyberDeck addiction is real, y'all

    Left to right: #PicoCalc (ClockworkPi) running a Lua firmware, #Tanmatsu (Nicolai Electronics) running the Synthwave example app, and #HackberryPi CM5 (Zitao) running the Pico-8 retro game development app (@zep) on top of RPi OS.

  7. Always nice to have a little family gathering at the weekend... :ablobcatbongokeyboard:

    #WHY2025 #Tanmatsu #KeebDeck #QWERTY #Keyboards

  8. @davedarko @calisti @timpritlove Which would have resulted in final units available in May.

    This design used the same pouch cell battery as the one used for the #MCH2022 badge.

    Since the #WHY2025 badge was designed by us /( @badgeteam ) under a a CERN open hardware license, this was allowed. Just as it allowed the lead designer ( @renze ) to release an updated version as the #Tanmatsu via his shop.

    ....

  9. By far the most complex model I made with FreeCAD. The case for the Tanmatsu badge. My laptop went through it's knees and I had to resort to my game computer to finish this. It needed several re-factors, test prints and TNP solutions. But I got it done.

    #freeCAD #tanmatsu #badge #badgeteam

  10. Tanmatsu handheld terminal has a RISC-V processor, QWERTY keyboard, and WiFi, Bluetooth, and LoRa

    The Tanmatsu handheld terminal is a an upcoming gadget from Nicolai Electronics that’s designed for programmers, hackers, and makers. The open source handheld combines a display and physical keyboard with a RISC-V processor, support for wireless protocols including WiFi, Bluetooth Low Energy, Zigbee and LoRa, and a hacker-friendly designed that’s meant to be modified thanks to several expansion ports.

    It’s not yet available for purchase, but you can sign up at the Tanmatsu website to be notified when it launches.

    The device features a “big” 800 x 480 pixel MIPI-DSI display, a 400 MHz ESP32-P4 dual-core microcontroller with 32MB of PSRAM, 16MB of flash storage, and an SD card reader.

    Wireless capabilities are courtesy of an ESP32-C6 radio module (WiFi, Bluetooth, and Zigbee), and an Ai-Thinker Ra-01S or Ra-01SH LoRa module for 433 MHz or 868/915 MHz networking, respectiely..

    Other odds and ends include a Lithium polymer battery, headphone jack, and expansion ports on the front and back of the device – the expansion port on the back is designed to support upcoming “personality modules” that will expand the functionality of the Tanmatsu. Everything is held together with a 3D printed case. Since this is a niche device that will probably be manufactured in small batches and sold on hobbyist stores like Tindie and Lectronz, I wouldn’t expect a higher-quality mass-produced case anytime soon.

    Since the hardware designs will be open source, anyone who wants to build their own instead of buying one should be able to do that… assuming they can source all of the appropriate components at reasonable prices.

    In terms of software, the plan is to ship the handheld with open source “launcher firmware” that “allows starting user made applications” and “provides access to a marketplace for applications where developers can publish their creations.”

    There’s no word on a price or release date yet.

    via Rubenerd

    #esp32P4 #handheld #handheldTerminal #lora #riscV #Tanmatsu