Hacking an old Kindle to display bus arrival times

(mariannefeng.com)

73 points | by mengchengfeng 2 hours ago ago

15 comments

  • FlyingSnake an hour ago

    Kindles are fun devices to hack and play with. I can grab an old kindle for €15-20 on eBay.

    I did the same last year and had lots of fun in the process.

    https://samkhawase.com/blog/hacking-kindle/

    • moffkalast 9 minutes ago

      For the less reverse-engineering prone among us, there are also similarly sized e-ink displays that plug into Raspberry Pi DSI ports for maybe $5 more on Aliexpress. They might actually be salvaged kindle screens.

    • mengchengfeng an hour ago

      I love it! Always fun to see the route somebody else took to get to the same end product.

      Your post is making me want to try more Cloudflare Developer Platform stuff like Cloudflare Workers.

  • michaelbuckbee an hour ago

    I love using Kindle's as single purpose tablet/interfaces/displays. I'm the weirdo who actually prefers the LCD displays vs eInk and it's incredibly easy to set Kindle Fire's into dev mode which lets you display a webpage, never turn off while connected to power and never show ads.

    You can regularly find the Kindle Fire HD10s for ~$40

    • mengchengfeng an hour ago

      Good to know about Kindle Fire. And hah, I can totally see why you'd prefer LCD's over e-ink - no ghosting + readable in pitch dark would be a sweet upgrade to the dashboard.

  • SirFatty an hour ago

    For some reason, this project reminds me of this one:

    https://engineersneedart.com/systemsix/systemsix.html

    • mengchengfeng an hour ago

      Woah this is really cool! Makes me want to create a custom mount

  • mkmk an hour ago

    I was glad to see the note about battery life down at the bottom. My biggest challenge with the old Kindles I have laying around is that most of them won't hold a charge!

    • bpmct 40 minutes ago

      I haven't developed on the Kindle ecosystem, but with old Nook devices I am able to set a screensaver, alarm, and put the device into deep sleep between refreshes. This changed my battery life from ~48 hours into 30+ days of battery life even with some old devices.

      The "electric sign" app does this, which is where I referenced the code.

      With trmnl, the image only refreshes every 10 mins so the device will set a ~9 minute alarm to wake the device right before it needs to load the next update.

      The refresh period is also configurable so a slower refresh interval (e.g. every hour for less time-sensitive screens) yields larger battery savings

    • mengchengfeng an hour ago

      Yeah that was definitely a worry of mine before I booted it up. Luckily it's still got decent battery life. We'll see how it holds up in 6 months...

      Dyson vacuums and Kindles are not the same whatsoever, but I wonder how easily it'd be to swap out the battery on an older Kindle. For our vacuum, all I needed was a 20 dollar replacement battery and the will unscrew 3 mini screws.

  • TZubiri 17 minutes ago

    A little bit of a hijack, but it's hard to find a more relevant time to post this.

    For a defunct startup, I built this exact thing as a product for coffee shops:

    cafetren.com.ar

    https://cafetren-com-ar.translate.goog/?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_... (translated from spanish):

  • adhamsalama 31 minutes ago

    Why Jailbreak the Kindle when you can just open its browser and visit a website that shows the arrival times?

    The Kindle browser is surprisingly decent, I made Claude Code generate an RSS feed reader compatible with the Kindle browser, with the ability to read full articles (for those feeds that require you to visit the website), and download articles. It also supports Reddit and Google News RSS feed. This is my new favorite way of browsing the internet.

    https://github.com/adhamsalama/simple-rss-reader

    • mengchengfeng 21 minutes ago

      It's easier to load up a page in the Kindle browser, but more fun to jailbreak :D

      I also didn't want the browser bar at the top.

      • adhamsalama 16 minutes ago

        Fair enough. I did consider jailbreaking my Kindle but I am afraid of bricking it.

        • mengchengfeng 6 minutes ago

          Also fair - bricking it was definitely one of my main concerns.

          After going through this process though, I'd say as long as somebody has basic linux knowledge, chances of bricking are pretty low.