Man Builds DIY Cellphone Using Raspberry Pi 83
Photographer and software engineer Dave Hunt has posted an article about his most recent project: a DIY cellphone based on a Raspberry Pi (he calls it a PiPhone). It has a touchscreen dialing interface for making calls, and it's built with off-the-shelf components. The total bill of materials clocks in at about $158: $40 for the rPi, $35 for the 320x240 touchscreen, $15 for the LiPo battery, $48 for the GSM module, and about $20 for miscellaneous other minor parts. Hunt says, '[The GSM/GPRS module] allow us to send standard AT commands to it to make calls, hang up, send texts, data etc. Overall a very clever module. Towards the bottom of the white PCB, you can see the SIM Card, which allows the module to associate with my local GSM network, and it’s using a regular prepaid SIM card, bought in my local phone store for €10. Below the GSM module, you can see the on.off switch and a DC-DC converter, which converts the 3.7volts from the LiPoly battery to 5volts needed by everything else.' He points out that the phone is not terribly practical, but it's a neat project. Hunt has done several others, including turning the Raspberry Pi into a controller for time-lapse photography. He'll be publishing the code he wrote for the PiPhone next week.
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Sent from his Rasberry Pi.
Re:Time to hire some suicidal Chinese workers... (Score:4, Interesting)
There's [neo900.org] no need [gta04.org] for that [openphoenux.org].
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a small, cheap, programmable switch that can be accessed remotely.
obviously, the FBI must raid the house of everyone who posts a message for this article, as we are now more likely than not to be able to detonate a nuclear warhead anywhere within the US from our home.
i mad a doorbell out of my pi (Score:5, Funny)
The cops just kick the door in.
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Make it play the COPS theme bad boys, when they, kick it in.
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How about "cop killer" instead?
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That's nothing. I made a door out of several dozen raspberry pis.
In retrospect, and now that the medication is kicking in, I'm beginning to wonder why.
Wait, it'll never work! (Score:3)
it doesn't have the catchy logo nor the rounded corners!?!? Also isn't a cell phone covered by like 250,000 patents? [techdirt.com]
He's takin our Jerbs!!! [youtube.com]
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One can only hope that he does.
Wow, a brick! (Score:3)
Not only will nobody try to steal that stack of electronics, but if they did try to mug you for it, you could hit them with it.
Besides removing that header connector, it could also have the USB connector desoldered, and one of those tiny wifi modules could be soldered directly on there, perhaps after having the connector part of the board cut down with a dremel. That would give you the option to do WiFi SIP as well as GSM.
Re:Wow, a brick! (Score:5, Interesting)
For WiFi SIP you could just use phones like Neo900, GTA04 or maybe even Freerunner. Each of them will give you better battery life, better performance (except Freerunner) and won't require you to run proprietary software on them, unlike Raspberry Pi.
Such DIY project is very nice thing to do as a part of your hobby, but any practical usage will be killed by lack of proper power management.
Re:Wow, a brick! (Score:4, Insightful)
Such DIY project is very nice thing to do as a part of your hobby, but any practical usage will be killed by lack of proper power management.
I thought we all understood that a project like this wasn't really practical, only an amusement. That's what the first bit of my comment was about. But the second part was about making it better, because why not?
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Because extending the scope of cool project from cool to pointless is just... pointless :)
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Because the project IS the point. It's learning through doing which is, in the end, what the Pi is all about.
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That's what I've been referring to. Putting some parts together to get modem working on Raspberry Pi maybe isn't hard, but it's definitely a great experience for a hobbyist doing something like that for the first time. In contrast, adding WiFi module and installing some SIP software on it is actually brain-dead simple (apt-get install linphone? :P) - it won't teach you anything more, and it won't work in any reasonable way as well thanks to Raspberry Pi limitations.
Doing stuff like that is great when they'r
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Well, considering the amount of bloat, crap, surveillance and simple bullshit the average phone runs that you can't get rid of (short of risking a bricking), I'd say he should be on par with contemporary "smart" (I'll use the term loosely here) phones.
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And then it wouldn't have a USB port anymore.
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And then it wouldn't have a USB port anymore.
So what? The USB is crap, just barely good enough for something like low-rate USB WiFi.
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Not only will nobody try to steal that stack of electronics, but if they did try to mug you for it, you could hit them with it.
I'd like to see him get that thing past the TSA w/o getting a cavity search - I mean "enhanced pat-down".
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Slashdotted phone number? (Score:2)
I'd be pissed if my phone started ringing incessantly because it was in a video on /.
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He displays it publicly on his website, so hasn't tried to hide the fact.
Y'know, maybe it's a marketing ploy to get one of the 3.5M slashdot readers to discuss business opportunities/offer him a job?
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Smartphone? (Score:2)
Re:Smartphone? (Score:5, Informative)
See how smart it is? Smarter than a LOT of cell phone users already!
And evidently his website is also running on pi (Score:2, Funny)
nt
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I guess it depends on the case you'll put it into. If it'll look like a regular old brick-phone, then there will be no difference between mass-produced and "DIY" one. Both of them will be subject to active eavesdropping by BTSes inside the airport and will be prevented to connect to regular ones outside the airport with jamming, so with "DIY" one you're just as "safe" as with the regular one.
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I guess it depends on the case you'll put it into. If it'll look like a regular old brick-phone, then there will be no difference between mass-produced and "DIY" one. Both of them will be subject to active eavesdropping by BTSes inside the airport and will be prevented to connect to regular ones outside the airport with jamming, so with "DIY" one you're just as "safe" as with the regular one.
Looks like he might be able to fit it into an old Motorola MicroTAC phone body:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... [wikipedia.org]
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I wouldn't go anywhere near the airport.with that.
They freak out and arrest people for having things looking much less like a bomb than that.
So, really... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, really this is "Man Builds DIY Cellphone Using DIY Cellphone Module".
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Any other interpretation is basically impossible, so well...
Re:So, really... (Score:4, Informative)
Oooh, car analogy time! This is like a kit car where you use a Chevy or Ford engine and transmission. Very few hobbyists go further than that, and if they do, they aren't hobbyists by the time they're done :)
Re:So, really... (Score:4, Interesting)
Were you expecting him to fab his own chips? Maybe he should grow his own silicon wafers while he's at it. Although, if he really wants to make a DIY phone, he must first invent the universe.
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Well, he could use a software radio module, and reverse engineer the whole GSM thing (but leave the SIM card to do the crypto with the towers). Should be possible, and you'd end up with a phone that could use the software radio to do funky low-level things across the spectrum.
Of course, such a thing would be illegal in most places where phones are used.
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I think they have the death penalty for that now.
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Hah. I really could come up with a few improvements ...
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Oooh, sarcasm!
You're being stupid, but yes - I do expect a bit more from a so-called tech site than "Man Builds Cellphone By Plugging Together Bits From Adafruit & Micro4You". Maybe a little bit of soldering, or at least a reasonable bit of commentary on how it all plugs together & works?
In case you didn't rea
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Since he doesn't appear to have really incorporated many "smart" functions using the pi, it could have all been done with the GSM module, a keypad, a PIC, and a generic 44780 based LCD display. That would, of course involve soldering, and assembly language, and no fat module idling along running linux.
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He didn't really discuss the software in the demo, but it looked fairly polished (not surprising from a professional software engineer) and if you noticed even had a PiPhone logo boot screen. It was certainly a lot more work to do this than the people who claim to have "built their own computer".
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What beta? I see no beta here.
DIY Cell Phone (Score:1)
I'm sure there is better components out there but this is really cool and make me wonder if I could build my own 1960's Star Trek communicator at some point before I die and have that as my cell phone.
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Mine got taffed by an arab. I know this, because he left my SIM in it (it was a PAYG) and some of my friends called me before they knew.
For a while I used to call it at random hours of the day & night. If I could remember the number I'd do it now.
Also, the stupid sod never worked out how to change the voicemail message.
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1997 called, they want their idea back.
Not first (Score:2)
By the way, this is not the first DIY mobile phone: here's a phone made out of Nokia N810 Internet Tablet: http://talk.maemo.org/showthre... [maemo.org]
And? (Score:1)
He bought premade modules and did something you've been able to do since just a few months after the RPi came out. Its been possible with Arduino shields for far longer.
Why exactly is this here? Just because the editors have no idea what articles their posting and have just realized that for way too much money you can make a really shitty cell phone?
I've got an arduino based cell phone buried in my desk somewhere, all using off the shelf modules, I'm pretty sure all of which I bought from radioshack thoug
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No, I won't post a link to my build because its not impressive, but I'll help your lazy ignorant ass out a bit.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=arduino+c... [lmgtfy.com]
First link is a basic phone for fucks sake
Scrambler (Score:1)
Not to criticise his efforts but. .. (Score:2)
I built one using a picaxe + GSM module in 2010. It was pretty challenging fitting enough AT commands in the limited eeprom on the picaxe. Worked great on the protoboard but I never bothered making a PCB for what is really a pretty pointless device. Even in 2010 I could have bought a better phone for $20. GSM modules are really useful: using one to make a phone seems like a waste! They're much more interesting for things like remote monitoring or smart SMS-enabled devices...
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Impressive.... (Score:1)
Why ...... (Score:2)
"PiPhone" (Score:3)
Apple is going to sue him so hard he'll think he's Samsung.
Interference (Score:1)
What's to see? (Score:1)
Build a mesh network phone. That's imoressive (Score:2)