Quoting Niter3 to All <=-
I stumbled across cyberdeck computers the other day, and realized
years ago a contractor I used to work with built one. I never really understood the need for these.
What is everyone else's thoughts? Do you have one, do you plan to
build, what are your real world use cases, etc....
Cougar428 wrote to NITER3 <=-
I don't have one, but since you already did some research you know
these were the fictional computers used in Neuromancer the fiction
novel by William Gibson.
It seems nowdays, people create functional Cyberdecks as a hobby.
Highly customized 'cyberpunk' devices that can be used for real. In the novel they allowed users to perform 'netrunner' abilities. Quickhacks
and breaching protocol.
poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Cougar428 <=-
Cougar428 wrote to NITER3 <=-
I don't have one, but since you already did some research you know
these were the fictional computers used in Neuromancer the fiction
novel by William Gibson.
It seems nowdays, people create functional Cyberdecks as a hobby.
Highly customized 'cyberpunk' devices that can be used for real. In the novel they allowed users to perform 'netrunner' abilities. Quickhacks
and breaching protocol.
I think the primary reason for cyberdecks nowadays is to get weird
looks from the other people at the coffee shop. I could imagine
walking
in dressed like a futuristic Doc Brown, order a Raktajino, and sit
down
with a computer looking like it's part keytar and part hax0r node, and
see what kind of looks you get from the influencers with their
MacBooks.
I think the primary reason for cyberdecks nowadays is to get weird
looks from the other people at the coffee shop. I could imagine walking
in dressed like a futuristic Doc Brown, order a Raktajino, and sit down
with a computer looking like it's part keytar and part hax0r node, and
see what kind of looks you get from the influencers with their
MacBooks.
boraxman wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
with a computer looking like it's part keytar and part hax0r node, and
see what kind of looks you get from the influencers with their
MacBooks.
That alone is reason enough to build one! I was thinking yesterday how "boring"
mobile computers are, visually.
some miminalistic sleeknees. I don't mind knobs and controls, in fact
I prefer them over "barely there" buttons or touch screens.
This seems to be the opposite of minimalism, and could become a
practical solution, if you could make it modular (ie, a suitcase
compter, where the "computer" part (storage and CPU) is
interchangeable.
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I don't know if anyone ever made a "Mitsubishi-Genentech" sticker, that
would be my next.
I don't know if anyone ever made a "Mitsubishi-Genentech" sticker, that
would be my next.
Easy enough to print your own.
boraxman wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
That alone is reason enough to build one! I was thinking yesterday how "boring"
mobile computers are, visually. There is no style to them apart from
some miminalistic sleeknees. I don't mind knobs and controls, in fact
I prefer them over "barely there" buttons or touch screens.
This seems to be the opposite of minimalism, and could become a
practical solution, if you could make it modular (ie, a suitcase
compter, where the "computer" part (storage and CPU) is
interchangeable.
This seems to be the opposite of minimalism, and could become a practical
solution, if you could make it modular (ie, a suitcase compter, where the
"computer" part (storage and CPU) is interchangeable.
Re: Re: Cyberdeck Computers
By: Jimmy Anderson to boraxman on Tue May 06 2025 07:43 pm
This seems to be the opposite of minimalism, and could become a prac
solution, if you could make it modular (ie, a suitcase compter, wher
"computer" part (storage and CPU) is interchangeable.
That was the original idea behind the NUC - have a computer you could throw in a bag and bring with you - plug into someone else's kvm and you're up and running.
I like the idea of a rooted phone running a linux distro - RDP into it from any Windows box and you've got a customized system wherever you go.
You'd need to figure out how to get it on wireless first. :(
I just posted this question on Absinthe, but I'll drop the same question here.
I stumbled across cyberdeck computers the other day, and realized years ago a contractor I used to work with built one. I never really
understood the need for these.
I think the primary reason for cyberdecks nowadays is to get weird
looks from the other people at the coffee shop. I could imagine walking
in dressed like a futuristic Doc Brown, order a Raktajino, and sit down
with a computer looking like it's part keytar and part hax0r node, and
see what kind of looks you get from the influencers with their
MacBooks.
That was the original idea behind the NUC - have a computer you could throw in a bag and bring with you - plug into someone else's kvm and you're up and running.
hollowone wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
I think the primary reason for cyberdecks nowadays is to get weird
looks from the other people at the coffee shop. I could imagine walking
in dressed like a futuristic Doc Brown, order a Raktajino, and sit down
with a computer looking like it's part keytar and part hax0r node, and
see what kind of looks you get from the influencers with their
MacBooks.
exactly that! :)
hollowone wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
That was the original idea behind the NUC - have a computer you could throw in a bag and bring with you - plug into someone else's kvm and you're up and running.
Have you seen Mind 2 computers made by Khadas?
I got the exact same looks when I brought my haX0e sticker-bombed
Thinkpad T43 with an external wifi antenna to a hipster coffee shop.
Have you seen Mind 2 computers made by Khadas?
No, not until you mentioned them - looks like a Mac mini-er, but
modular. Nice!
On 06 May 2025, poindexter FORTRAN said the following...
It's a shame you need to "root" it to get that in the first place, but I like the idea too. I used to carry a USB stuck with Puppy Linux, which was my "mobile system",but really, the phone should be able to do it. It technically is a general purpose computer, or could be one.
I guess you can get somewhat close using Termux and SSH. Just start Termux, launch SSHD and then SSH into your phone. You'll have a terminal based system which is mostly good enough for me.
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