Today’s mobile computing space is dominated by smartphones, tablets, and laptop computers. One maker remembers the no-standards frontier days of mobile computers, though. Harkening back to the PalmPilot, Apple Newton, and ultra-mobile PCs (UPMCs) like theHP Jornada 720, the creator is developing the Raspberry Pi-powered Pocket Z into a UPMC for under $100.

The software engineer known asIcepat on Hackadayhas a first prototype already in hand. This UPMC has a seven-inch 1024 x 600-pixel capacitive touchscreen display, and a silicone membrane keyboard, and runs Linux. Since the goal is to have a GUI, the Pocket Z runs theXFCE Desktop Environmentand Conky. It’s all driven by aRaspberry Pi Zero 2 W.

Pocket Z and HP Jornada, the inspiration for the project

To keep the cost down, Icepat connected the touchscreen display to the Pi Zero 2 W using the board’sGPIO headers. One perhaps negative effect of this is that the display uses all of the development board’s GPIO pins. There’s nothing left for sensors or additional accessories for hacking purposes.

The UPMC has a USB-C connector for the power management system and a lithium-polymer (Li-Po) battery. Icepat also added a single USB-A port for connecting accessories like a mouse, keyboard, orexternal storage. The Pocket Z also has its own keyboard, controlled by anAtmega32U4 microcontrollerwith a TI-92 keyboard layout.

The Pocket Z booted into the XFCE Desktop Environment

Icepat was able to get the first prototype to boot intoRaspberry Pi OSLite and load the XFCE desktop environment and learned some important lessons along the way. The hope is to bring the display down to a 5-inch version, similar to a Sharp Zaurus.

Icepat also says it would be nice to develop a custom keyboard for the UPMC, but acknowledges that “Buildinga good keyboardis really hard and a low price point is still one of the main goals.” The project is off to a good start, though. It will be interesting to see what comes of it.

Pocket Z 7 : First Prototype Booting - YouTube

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Jeff Butts has been covering tech news for more than a decade, and his IT experience predates the internet. Yes, he remembers when 9600 baud was “fast.” He especially enjoys covering DIY and Maker topics, along with anything on the bleeding edge of technology.

The XFCE desktop on the Pocket Z

Jeff Butts