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dstaley | 3 years ago

No, something more akin to a smart display without a battery and a chassis that works well for being on a shelf or nightstand.

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KVFinn|3 years ago

>No, something more akin to a smart display without a battery and a chassis that works well for being on a shelf or nightstand.

Or just hackable. The Lenovo Smart Clock 2 is a 4 inch touchscreen Google Home clock, microphone, decent little speakers, for $20.

Apparently it is hackable and fully rooted: https://github.com/untocodes/lenovo-cube-hacking

I don't see anybody doing anything cool with it though. I wouldn't mind just forcing it to always display a webpage to display blood glucose levels with nightscout. I'd give them to all my diabetic relatives.

($20 clock https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/p/smart-devices/smart-home/smar...)

ljf|3 years ago

I have one of the gen one and wanted to love it. But so many things just weren't right.

Doesn't show my Google calendar reminders

Getting it to play a morning routine failed, and when it worked the volume levels were all over the place - sometimes the news it played me would be super loud, sometimes I couldn't here the radio or music it played next.

It can't play a youtube video

It didn't have loads of basic controls when listening to podcasts (speed, skip back 30 seconds etc)

Can't display a custom home screen, I'd love to see more weather detail, or a tide chart, or local traffic news.

As I say, really wanted to like it, but never found a use for it yet.

CharlesW|3 years ago

dstaley|3 years ago

Yup, basically that idea, but a bit higher spec (Linux-capable CPU instead of a microcontroller, larger and higher-resolution touchscreen). But it's definitely on the right track! Ideally we'd have something in line spec-wise with the Amazon Echo Show 5.

zem|3 years ago

that one does look beautiful! thanks for the pointer.

ChuckMcM|3 years ago

That does kind of describe the modern "cheap" android infrastructure. (caveat the battery, which after a bunch of years is useless anyway :-)) The other "modern" alternative to this is an HDMI display with a Raspberry Pi mounted to the back[1].

One could 3D print a different frame in order to mount speakers and a web camera, but that isn't really off the shelf any more at that point.

[1] https://www.seeedstudio.com/raspberry-pi-ips-hdmi-display is an example.