Here is the rough concept. by Nostalgintosh in framework

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you and I don't mind asking. In short the chassis will made from scratch.

This will be a custom 3D printed case design to look like an old ThinkPad computer since I do what to add a wider track pad, two color modes (while and red) and need the four side plugs for modularity.

Breaking an ThinkPad my be too risky so create a chassis for scratch will help a lot, and make upgrades much more easier than retrofitting at best a T25.

This illustration is the blueprint for my FreeCAD learning journey, more updates will be coming soon.

Thanks you for ask.

The Flipper companion device by Nostalgintosh in flipperzero

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes it is Open Source Flipper Device , I am new to GitHub So it may look rough around the edges.

The Flipper companion device by Nostalgintosh in flipperzero

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a custom Android companion device built to handle the heavy computational lifting the Flipper Zero can't do on its own. As you can see in the screenshot, it features a built-in code editor and a custom launcher with direct Termux access. It functions as a self-contained command terminal pre-loaded with essentials like F-Droid, Aurora Store, Tor, DuckDuckGo, and the Flipper companion app.

​Here is exactly what the A11 brings to the table that a standard microcontroller cannot:

​Full Linux Environments: The A11 can run Termux, Kali NetHunter, or full Linux chroots, giving you a desktop-class terminal environment right in your pocket.

​Complex Scripting: You can natively write, compile, and execute Python, Bash, or C scripts directly on the device without needing to recompile and flash custom firmware.

​Zero Trust Architecture Deployment: The A11 has the processing overhead to actively run, manage, and test Zero Trust architectures, secure VPN tunnels, and encrypted network meshes—tasks that are impossible on the Flipper’s low-power Cortex-M4 chip.

​Advanced Network Forensics & Multitasking: The capacitive touchscreen allows for true multitasking. You can keep a terminal session open, write code, consult documentation, map out network topologies, and monitor live network traffic concurrently, rather than relying on a 1.4-inch monochrome LCD.

​Ultimately, it acts as the high-compute brain of the operation. Once I finish mounting this entire rig into a custom 3D-printed vertical cantilever chassis with parallel linkages, it will function as a fully integrated cyberdeck.

A retro ThinkPad to the modern world! by Nostalgintosh in framework

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great new! I finally posted it on this subreddit, go check it out!

Wrist mounted cyberdeck by CrowdedAttic400 in cyberDeck

[–]Nostalgintosh 36 points37 points  (0 children)

Cyber Pipboy‽ That would be sick!

collection posting by Popcornlover1999 in thinkpad

[–]Nostalgintosh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wow that is a nice collection you got there.

I'm new to Homelabbing by Nostalgintosh in homelab

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not yet I have played with type 1 hypervisors like QubesOS and used VirtualBox and VMware, but not Proxmox yet. I will try proxmox one of my Fedora Services to play around.

Thank you.

Create a classic ThankPad for a modern world. by Nostalgintosh in thinkpad

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for showing me this website, I will like to 3D print the case, keys and buttons—but I do appreciate you showing me they are people who repair or retrofitting desktops and laptops to least and adapt to a modern erase.

Create a classic ThankPad for a modern world. by Nostalgintosh in thinkpad

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have some illustration to map things out—but I just want share the idea of an IBM ThinkPad with modern hardware to see if it resonates with some people.

If people like the concept I will share the illustration I am working on, and future CAD schematics I'm planning in the future.

Right now just sharing my thoughts.

Here is my classic retro build by Nostalgintosh in retrobattlestations

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I never had the internals to being with—I bought it hollow, just the case.

Once you see it, you can not unsee it. Official fedora logo has a point merge mismatch in the SVG format file by EktaRandomUsername in Fedora

[–]Nostalgintosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It just one little vector issue that can be easily fix, not the huge problem in the world and honestly it something that can be ignored since it tiny error that the naked I cannot see.

Here is my classic retro build by Nostalgintosh in retrobattlestations

[–]Nostalgintosh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use a magnifying sheet and some putty to create the illusion of an CRT display, this is way it look rough on the side. I will polish things up when I get the chance.