Clockwork's uConsole is a modular portable computer & "fantasy console" for $139 and up – Liliputing

Liliputing
The uConsole is pocket-sized computer with a 5 inch IPS LCD color display, a QWERTY keyboard, gaming buttons, arrow keys, and a mini trackball. It’s bigger than a typical smartphone, and probably less powerful than most. But thanks to a modular design, it’s also incredibly versatile: there are four different processor options available.
Clockwork is positioning the uConsole as a “fantasy console” made real. But like all of the company’s devices to date, it’s basically a portable, modular computer that can be used for a variety of purposes. The uConsole is up for pre-order for $139 and up and should begin shipping in about three months.

The uConsole is the latest in a line of modular devices from Clockwork, which is the same company behind the DevTerm portable terminal and Gameshell modular DIY handheld game console.
At the heart of these devices is a modular board system that allows you to choose from several different system-on-a-modular solutions including:
Prices for the uConsole range from $139 for a kit with the R-01 module to $209 for the uConsole Kit A-06, although you can pay extra for an optional 4G cellular modem, or save some money on some models by opting for a DIY kit without a system-on-a-module, allowing you bring your own if you already have a Raspberry Pi Compute Module, for example.

The new ClockworkPi v3.14 revision 5 board at the heart of the system measures 95 x 77mm and is compatible with Raspberry Pi CM3 and CM4 series modules (with an adapter board), as well as Raspberry Pi’s own modules.
The board has integrated WiFI 5 and Bluetooth 5.0 support, an antenna, a USB Type-C charging port and three USB Type-A interfaces and internal connections, a microSD card reader, 3.5mm headphone jack, micro HDMI port, 40-pin MIPI screen interface and 40-pin GPIO and 52-pin extension connectors.
Clockwork’s optional cellular module supports 4G LTE Cat 4 data and includes a SIM card slot, 3.5mm audio jack.

The device features a 1280 x 720 pixel IPS LCD display panel and a 74-key backlit keyboard with adjustable lighting. Keyboard firmware can be reprogrammed and customized.
Clockwork says the uConsole is powered by a pair of rechargeable 18650 batteries. A single battery could theoretically provide enough power to run the console for a brief period of time if you wanted to swap batteries one by one, although the company says this can cause instability and recommends shutting down the device before changing batteries.

But it’s still nice to see a portable computing device with removable batteries. The whole system is designed to be assembled, disassembled, repaired, or upgraded at home.
The all-metal case is held together with screws that can be removed using a 2.5mm hex key. There’s no glue or adhesive involved. And the 3D design files are available at Clockwork’s GitHub page in case you want to 3D print or manufacture your own case or accessories or modify the designs.

Clockwork says the uConsole should support a range of operating systems including the Linux-based Debian, Ubuntu and Raspberry Pi OS as well as the company’s own ClockworkOS. There’s also support for a range of gaming software including Pico-8, DOSBox, and RetroArch, as well as more general-use applications including Chromium, Libreoffice, Vim, and VLC… although I suspect performance will vary greatly depending on which system-on-a-module you opt for.
Now that Intel, Google, and others have largely given up on the idea of this sort of modular device, it’s nice to see companies like Clockwork and Framework keep the dream of modular computing alive… even if Clockwork’s products are a little more niche than Framework’s.
via BoingBoing and @Hal_clockwork
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Seems like something I’d play with for a few days and then put in a drawer to never be used again.
I wonder what people will actually use this for.
So that modem can theoretically make phone calls, but I expect the people who developed this device never put ANY work into getting that to function beyond checking that the “console” could receive data as wired. So if you want that you’re probably going to have to do a lot of hacky nonsense and load custom firmware onto it just to trick the calls into going through.
this device no have microphone jack. I cant connect to my ham radio 🙁
So use one of the USB ports. You can get a USB audio input interface for very cheap. A lot of devices these days don’t have analog audio in ports because, when designing a computer, they aren’t planning to make a part of a ham radio setup. Most users will not be using that port, so you have to add it. If you’re really intending it to be part of such a setup, you’ll have cables all over the place and a small adapter won’t be much of a problem to integrate.
This keyboard will not even last 5 years of intensive use. Why they didn’t put mechanical keys in there.
I wonder how much it runs on these two batteries. Probably 2-3 hours ;(
I’d buy one of these types of things just as a neat portable curiosity that you can play games on in a heartbeat except for one thing. It doesn’t seem like the people that design these have ever actually seen or touched a control pad even once in life. How are you suppose to play anything on it with those horrible controls?
Oh wow, basically a modernized Pocket C.H.I.P.
A cool toy, but not very useful I don’t think.
no ethernet rj , no gpio, no mic input
I dont know for who this device is.
ugly keyboard for console working, small working time…. (not weeks but two hours).
not useful in real scenario
Apparently the Devterm gets up to 8hrs. Rest could be fixed by using the USB port.

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Clockwork’s uConsole is a modular portable computer & “fantasy console” for $139 and up
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