SystemSix is an e-Ink "desk accessory" running on a Raspberry Pi. It is a bit of nostalgia that can function as a calendar, display the weather

Overview

SystemSix

SystemSix is an e-Ink "desk accessory" running on a Raspberry Pi. It is a bit of nostalgia that can function as a calendar, display the weather, the current phase of the moon or just be generally fun to look at.

To be clear, despite how it looks, it is not interactive. It changes every day to display a new "desktop", will update to show local weather, your calendar events, phase of the moon. But you cannot click on it.

It was wrtitten as a love-letter to my first Macintosh. Hopefully it is nostaglic, somewhat informative, and fun.

SystemSix screenshot.

Features

• Calendar date is displayed.

• Retrieves and displays your first six calendar events for the day, refreshes in the evening.

• Retrieves and displays the local weather forecast at the start of each day.

• Current phase of the moon displayed. (New moon? Maybe you get a Calculator instead.)

• Specify "trash day" and on that day of the week, the trash can icon will display full. Can be a handy reminder.

• Several different overall layouts and a random selection from over 100 classic icons means you wake up to a surprise desktop every day.

SystemSix

The display is 5.83" e-ink display from Waveshare.

More (exhaustive) details on how SystemSix was created are on my blog.

Running

If you are new to Python as I was: briefly, you pull down the sources and open systemsix.py in a Python IDE (example: Thonny, that generally comes pre-installed on the Raspberry Pi — on a desktop OS, PyCharm is a popular one). Then you run it.

Hopefully the requirements.txt file covers the needed Python modules and you have no problems running SystemSix. (Hopefully too your Python environment already is pointing to Python3 and not an older Python implmentation.)

In systemsix.py, there is a flag at the top: USE_EINK_DISPLAY. Set this to False and you can run systemsix.py in any environment, even without an e-ink display attached. The workflow for updating the e-ink display involves first creating the image that you want displayed. Most of the code in SystemSix is doing just that: creating the final image of the desktop. When you set USE_EINK_DISPLAY to False the final image is instead opened in your current OS environment, not sent to the e-ink driver. (On MacOS it is Preview that is launched to display the resulting image.)

See the Settings section below on how to customize SystemSix and personalize it.

To dedicate a Raspberry Pi to run SystemSix headless, I had to learn about crontab. This is the program that is run to schedule automatic tasks on the computer. Once set up, it requires no human interaction.

In the Terminal app on a Raspberry Pi I entered:

crontab -e

This brings up a text editor in Terminal. Then I scrolled down to the bottom of the file and added this line:

@reboot sleep 60 && /home/pi/SystemSix/run_systemsix.sh

This says that 60 seconds after booting, the computer will run the shell script named run_systemsix.sh located at the path /home/pi/SystemSix/. If you pulled the files down somewhere else you will have a different path to the shell script file.

Settings

"Trash day" is defined in Settings.py as an integer. Set the value to 1 for Monday, 2 for Tuesday, etc. Setting the value to None will cause the trash to never be shown full. Set to any other value to indicate that "trash day" should be random.

For the weather API I use, LATITUDE and LONGITUDE should be supplied in Settings.py. I query api.weather.gov to turn the LAT/LONG into an office ID and grid X and Y that weather.gov uses to retrieve local forecasts.

To display your upcoming calendar events the settings and code are the same as the implementation from 13Bytes. I can only speak to my experiences with MacOS Calendar. WEBDAV_IS_APPLE I set to True and for WEBDAV_CALENDAR_URL I entered the URL to fetch my public calendar.

Figuring out my calendar URL turned out to be a challenge. In the end I had to create a new calendar in Apple's Calendar app and make sure to mark it as public. Then I found the sharing affordance in Calendar and "shared" the calendar with myself (I emailed it to myself). The link in the email contained the (150+ character) URL that I was then able to paste into Settings.py. Mine started out like this: webcal://p97-caldav.icloud.com/published/2/NDYyNT.....

Technical

E-ink displays, at least the hobbyist-priced ones (or maybe it's their drivers), are both slow and a little unsightly when they refresh. I had wanted to play with them however so chose a project (a calendar/weather app) where infrequent display refreshes were acceptable.

I'm new to both Python and e-ink displays, so forgive me if my explanation here is a little off. As I touched on earlier, I found that the general gist of displaying content to the e-ink display was to build an image of the correct width/height and in the correct bit depth for the display using the graphics library of your choice (PIL or "Pillow" for Python) and then call the e-ink driver code to display that finished image.

There is then a whole bunch of flashing and flickering of the e-ink display that goes on until, some dozen seconds or so later, your image is visible. It is, I find, quite distracting. To that end, the code tries to minimize the refreshes, updates.

At midnight the display gets a refresh. Since the current calendar date is one of the things we display, updating at midnight is a no-brainer. The display is updated.

Morning (currently I have chosen 4:05 AM) gets a special update. It is this update/period when a new layout/desktop is chosen for the day. There will of course always be a display update/refresh in the morning. Further, it is the morning period when both the weather forecast and calendar events are first attempted.

The weather API I am using often fails. Or rather, it often returns a bogus forecast. It's not that the forecast is inaccurate, instead it is a forecast from several months past. I added code to test a date in the forecast that is returned and reject these errant forecasts. Additionally, I note that fetching the weather failed.

Every hour the app awakens and decides whether to update or not. If it had failed to fetch the weather (or calendar events) the previous hour it will kick off another fetch. Only if it succeeds then will it refresh the display. If it fails again it goes back to sleep and will retry an hour later.

An hour between updates (especially failed ones) may seem rather coarse but I kind of like that the app is more patient than I am.

The only other special update is the evening update (currently 5:05 PM). Calendar events are again refreshed (to show the next day's events) and the desktop is refreshed. It is with the evening refresh that the desktop code may display the phase of the moon by bringing up the Moon "desk accessory".

If all the fetches are happy, you are likely never to actually see the display update except perhaps the evening update.

Esoterica

Inspired of course by the early Macintosh (my first Apple computer was a Macintosh Plus, and I loved it). The display is not precisely 512 × 342 pixels as were the early "classic" Macs. There is no e-Ink dispay of this resolution. The 5.83" E-Ink display from Waveshare was close at 648 × 480.

Pixels on the e-ink display are right up to the edge where the metal of the panel meets. I found that if I presented content right up to the edges I could not easily attach a plastic bezel that would hide the metal trim of the panel without obscuring some of the pixels. For that reason I intentionally left a "letterbox", black padding pixels (or a matte if you prefer) on all four sides of the content.

Had I left about 68 pixels of black border all around I could have displayed the content precisely at 512 × 342. I feel the panel is already small and I did not want to shrink the content by that degree. This is a compromise.

This project was my introduction to learning Python. I started from the sources of the beautiful eInkCalendar submitted by 13Bytes. I did a lot of refactoring of 13Bytes code and added a lot of rendering code to display the desktop and icons in various configurations. I added the weather and phases of the Moon. Much of the effort though involved preparing image assets, coming up with visually attractive desktop layouts.

In fact the idea for SystemSix came about when I went to add phases of the Moon to 13Bytes' original eInkCalendar. To display the moon in black and white I decided to dither the grayscale source art. Atkinson dithering was a nice algorithm I remember from the classic Mac days and so I sought that out. Once I saw the moon "Atkinson dithered" on an e-ink display my thoughts for the project went in a whole different direction — and so SystemSix came about.

Issues

The weather API, api.weather.gov is not real reliable in my area. For reasons I don't understand the forecast returned is often, errantly, a forecast from the end of December 2021. It's an odd bug, I know. Nonetheless, I added (BOGUS) code to look for this incorrect forecast and reject it. I designed the code though to re-try failed data fetches every hour. Often when I get the bogus weather forecast it will eventually come back correct some hours later.

I could move to a different weather API, but from having just dipped my toe into web API, it looked like most API require the user to set up an account and then pass a token in the query URL. That seemed pretty user-unfriendly, more hoops to go through to get SystemSix up and running. So for now I passed on looking further into it.

The fonts are not all perfect. Many are missing fairly common glyphs (I had to manually edit the Geneva 9 font to add the degree glyph, for example). Kerning, spacing might not be ideal (the space character in Geneva 9 was way too wide and I had to go in and tighten it up).

I cheated to get a bold "Geneva 12" and just rendered the font twice; offset to the right by one pixel on the second render.

Because the display is ultimately two values (B&W) any sort of aliasing will look bad when displayed. Careful attention therefore has to be made to find the precise font size that will yield glyphs on perfect pixel boundaries.

Acknowledgments

Code base began from eInkCalendar by 13Bytes.

The ChiKareGo2 font is under Creative Commons license.

The artwork came from taking screenshots of the excellent MiniVMac emulator.

"Good enough for 1.0…"

Owner
John Calhoun
After a 30-year hiatus, back to writing shareware, ha ha.
John Calhoun
An open-source Discord Nuker can be used as a self-bot or a regular bot.

How to use Double click avery.exe, and follow the prompts Features Important! Make sure to use [9] (Scrape Info) before using these, or some things ma

Exortions 3 Jul 03, 2022
Kang Sticker bot

Kang Sticker Bot A simple Telegram bot which creates sticker packs from other stickers, images, documents and URLs. Based on kangbot Deploy Credits: s

Hafitz Setya 11 Jan 02, 2023
Polar devices Python API and CLI.

loophole - Polar devices API About Python API for Polar devices. Command line interface included. Tested with: A360 Loop M400 Installation pip install

[roscoe] 145 Sep 14, 2022
Notification Reminder Application For Python

Notification-Reminder-Application No matter how well you set up your to-do list and calendar, you aren’t going to get things done unless you have a re

1 Nov 26, 2021
Project for QVault Hackathon which plays sounds based on the letters of a user's name

virtual_instrument Project for QVault Hackathon which plays sounds based on the letters of a user's name I created a virtual instrument using Python a

Paolo Sidera 2 Feb 11, 2022
A jokes api python module

A jokes api python module

Fayas Noushad 3 Nov 28, 2021
Coinbase Pro API interface framework and tooling

neutrino This project has just begun. Rudimentary API documentation Installation Prerequisites: Python 3.8+ and Git 2.33+ Navigate into a directory of

Joshua Chen 1 Dec 26, 2021
A template / demo bot for the Halcyon matrix bot library

Halcyon stock bot Hello! This is an example / template bot using the halcyon matrix bot library. Feel free to ask questions in the matrix chat #halcyo

Wes Ring 1 Feb 04, 2022
Send pm to Admin - Telegram

Send pm to Admin - Telegram

Ahoora 3 Nov 17, 2022
Real-time cryptocurrencies prices.

New update added more cryptocurrencies and GBP If you like it give it a star Crypto-watcher is simple program showing price of cryptocurrency in USD a

Adrijan 25 Dec 13, 2022
Auto like & auto followers facebook

Auto like & auto followers facebook

Fahmi Dev 23 Dec 08, 2022
The Best Telegram UserBot Made With Pyrogram [Python]

Asterix UserBot A Powerful Telegram userbot based on Pyrogram. How To Deploy Asterix Heroku Railway Qovery Termux Tutorial Railway Deploy Comming Soon

TeamAsterix 9 Oct 17, 2022
Python API to interact with Uwazi

Python Uwazi API Quick Start To use the API install the requirements pip3 install -r requirements.txt and use it like this: uwazi_adapter = UwaziAdap

HURIDOCS 2 Dec 16, 2021
Ethereum transactions and wallet information for people you follow on Twitter.

ethFollowing Ethereum transactions and wallet information for people you follow on Twitter. Set up Setup python environment (requires python 3.8): vir

Brian Donohue 2 Dec 28, 2021
Discord music bot using discord.py, slash commands, and yt-dlp.

bop Discord music bot using discord.py, slash commands, and yt-dlp. Features Play music from YouTube videos and playlists Queue system with shuffle Sk

Hizkia Felix 3 Aug 11, 2022
Web3 Ethereum DeFi toolkit for smart contracts, Uniswap and PancakeSwap trades, Ethereum JSON-RPC utilities, wallets and automated test suites.

Web3 Ethereum Defi This project contains common Ethereum smart contracts and utilities, for trading, wallets,automated test suites and backend integra

Trading Strategy 222 Jan 04, 2023
Fix Twitter video embeds in Discord

TwitFix very basic flask server that fixes twitter embeds in discord by using youtube-dl to grab the direct link to the MP4 file and embeds the link t

Robin Universe 682 Dec 28, 2022
Unofficial instagram API, give you access to ALL instagram features (like, follow, upload photo and video and etc)! Write on python.

Instagram-API-python Unofficial Instagram API to give you access to ALL Instagram features (like, follow, upload photo and video, etc)! Written in Pyt

Vladimir Bezrukov 1 Nov 19, 2021
The Easy-to-use Dialogue Response Selection Toolkit for Researchers

Easy-to-use toolkit for retrieval-based Chatbot Our released data can be found at this link. Make sure the following steps are adopted to use our code

GMFTBY 32 Nov 13, 2022
Wonderful Phoenix-Bot

Phoenix Bot Discord Phoenix Bot is inspired by Natewong1313's Bird Bot project yet due to lack of activity by their team. We have decided to revive th

Senior Developer 0 Aug 12, 2021