Pocket Sprite Laptop Mount ================================================================================ I’ve been playing with this Pocket Sprite a bit lately. It’s a tiny ESP32-based device that can emulate Gameboy, NES and various other classic game systems. Besides this, it’s also quite straight-forward to develop for. The development process is a bit tiresome however, involving a multi-step process to get your applications on to the device. To make this a bit less painful, and to distract me from my shortcomings in writing C, I decided to design a bracket to hold the Pocket Sprite in view while I’m developing for it. The design isn’t perfect yet (even 5 6 iterations in!) but it sort of does the job. You can grab the .stl on Thingiverse (https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3001310) if you like too! [IMAGE: https://blog.omgmog.net/images/3d-printing/IMG_20180629_140755.jpg] [IMAGE: https://blog.omgmog.net/images/3d-printing/IMG_20180704_180845.jpg] [IMAGE: https://blog.omgmog.net/images/3d-printing/IMG_20180712_160056.jpg] [IMAGE: https://blog.omgmog.net/images/3d-printing/IMG_20180712_160116.jpg] [IMAGE: https://blog.omgmog.net/images/3d-printing/IMG_20180712_160259.jpg] ================================================================================ Published July 04, 2018 Generated from the original post: https://blog.omgmog.net/post/pocketsprite-laptop-mount/ Max Glenister is an interface designer and senior full-stack developer from Oxfordshire. He writes mostly about front-end development and technology. - Mastodon: https://indieweb.social/@omgmog - Github: https://github.com/omgmog - Reddit: https://reddit.com/u/omgmog - Discord: https://discordapp.com/users/omgmog#6206