Tag Archives: delighting

Hobbyist adds a hinge to the Game Boy Pocket, delighting everyone

Enlarge / This custom-built Game Boy Pocket SP can fold in half like a feisty clam.

Earlier this month, a programmer and hobbyist named Allison Parrish debuted a compact hack of the 1996 Nintendo Game Boy Pocket handheld game console. Taking inspiration from the later Game Boy Advance SP, she fabricated a custom plastic shell with a hinge so the older monochrome Game Boy can fold shut. She calls it the Game Boy Pocket SP.

In Parrish’s extensive write-up of the mod, she explains that her hack began as something of a joke. The Game Boy modding community is popular right now, and one currently trending mod involves transplanting the circuitry of a folding Game Boy Advance SP (from 2003) into a non-folding custom shell. So she thought, “If y’all can take the hinge out of an SP, why can’t I add a hinge to a Game Boy that never had one?”

Parrish, who is an assistant arts professor at NYU, built her complex folding mod over the summer using tools at her university department’s ITP/IMA shop and the NYU Makerspace. Its unique clamshell design comes courtesy of a Game Boy Pocket motherboard she cut in half, along with custom-design flex PCBs (printed circuit boards) that route signals between the two folding halves. To pull it all together, Parrish designed a 3D-printed plastic shell using FreeCAD.

An exploded CAD view of the Game Boy Pocket SP’s custom shell, designed by Allison Parrish.

Additional parts, such as the backlit screen, label, buttons, and rechargeable battery, came from hobbyist shops.

The finished product is compact, backlit, rechargeable via USB, and it plays original monochrome Game Boy games. Cartridges plug in just behind the screen, like in the original Game Boy Pocket. After announcing a rough prototype of the mod in September, the Game Boy Pocket SP won first place in the “Technical” category in r/gameboy’s modding contest on Reddit.

Currently, the Game Boy Pocket SP remains a one-of-a-kind device because of the intense effort involved in making it. “The research and development process was also very expensive,” Parrish writes. “In addition to the costs of materials and manufacturing, there’s also the cost of my own labor.”

Still, if you’d like to attempt to replicate her feat, Parrish has provided PCB and shell design files on GitHub and an almost step-by-step write-up of the build process on her website.

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iPhone now supports 86-year-old Dvorak keyboard layout natively, delighting Woz

Enlarge / The Dvorak layout is now available for iPhone.

Benj Edwards / Ars Technica

Tired of QWERTY? Starting with iOS 16—which launched last month—the Apple iPhone now supports the 86-year-old Dvorak keyboard layout natively. Previously, Dvorak typing aficionados needed to install a third-party app to use the layout.

Dvorak uses a different arrangement of keys than the standard QWERTY layout with the aim of improving typing speed and ergonomic comfort. August Dvorak and William Dealey invented the layout in 1936 after studying the deficiencies of the QWERTY typewriter keyboard, which was already 60 years old at that point.

Apple and Dvorak have an interesting history. The company first included native Dvorak support for its computers in the US model of the Apple IIc, released in 1984. It included a special “Keyboard” button that would swap the layout between QWERTY and Dvorak logically, but the physical keycaps would need to be re-arranged to match if you needed a label reference.

Enlarge / The QWERTY and Dvorak keyboard layouts side by side on iPhone.

Benj Edwards / Ars Technica

Interestingly, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak (“Woz”) learned Dvorak around 1993 and never looked back (he wasn’t involved with Dvorak on the Apple IIc, he says). In an email to Ars Technica, Woz recounted how he first learned Dvorak. “I was on a flight to Tokyo and I ran Mavis Beacon teaches typing in Dvorak mode,” he wrote. “I spent 5 hours learning it and never again looked at a QWERTY keyboard. That’s all it took. My son had already switched over successfully, and learned Dvorak in a short time and quickly got up to the same speed he typed in QWERTY in about a week.”

Enlarge / Selecting the “Dvorak” layout in Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards.

Ars Technica

To use Dvorak on your iPhone, first make sure you’ve upgraded to iOS 16 or later. Next, open the Settings app and navigate to General > Keyboard > Keyboards, then tap your language and select “Dvorak” from the list. The next time you pull up the keyboard, you’ll see the different layout, with a home row that reads “AOEUIDHTNS”—exactly how August Dvorak would have liked it.

It’s worth noting that Dvorak’s purported speed improvements come from using 10 fingers to type, so if you’re just learning Dvorak, you might not see any speed improvements over QWERTY when typing with two fingers, such as your thumbs. However, longtime Dvorak users will likely be pleased.

“What I liked most about Dvorak then was the feeling of using less energy with your fingers,” Woz said. “Since iPhones came, I had to resort to QWERTY but it wasn’t in my brain anymore. I had been a very fast QWERTY typist my whole life, but now it’s gone. I have to look at the letters on my iPhone.”

Ars informed Wozniak of the native Dvorak support in iOS 16, and he replied, “OMG! Thank you very much!”

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