2025-11-20 21:30:03
Sarang Sheth

Your laptop can do anything, which increasingly means it’s optimized for nothing. This isn’t a new observation, but the solutions have mostly been software-based: distraction-blocking apps, focus modes, website blockers that you can disable the moment willpower falters. The Typeframe project takes a more permanent approach – build a computer that literally cannot do anything except let you write.

Jeff Merrick’s open-source writerdeck designs come in two flavors. The PX-88 is a desktop-style portable with a full keyboard and integrated screen, styled after the 1985 Epson PX-4 that inspired it. The PS-85 shrinks down to a 40% keyboard layout while maintaining that same retro-futuristic aesthetic. Both use Raspberry Pi boards as their brains, and both are documented with the kind of step-by-step detail that assumes you’ve never touched CAD software or soldered components together.

Designer: Jeff Merrick

For the uninitiated, the Epson PX-4 was a chunky CP/M portable that field engineers actually carried into the field, with swappable keyboards and modular components that could turn it into different tools for different jobs. It ran on batteries and had a tiny 40×8 character display that virtually expanded to 80×25. The appeal wasn’t raw computing power – it was that the thing did exactly what you needed and nothing more. Merrick’s designs capture that purposefulness while swapping in modern components that are actually available and affordable.

The community around writerdecks has been growing quietly alongside the broader cyberdeck movement. Where cyberdecks lean into the hacker aesthetic with exposed electronics and tactical mounting points, writerdecks prioritize the writing experience itself. There’s active discussion on Reddit’s r/cyberDeck forum, open-source software projects like WareWoolf and ZeroWriter built specifically for distraction-free writing, and a thriving market for vintage AlphaSmart Neo devices – basically the original writerdecks from the early 2000s that are still beloved for their springy keyboards and complete lack of internet connectivity.

Merrick freely admits this is his first project at this scale, and he’s documented it with that beginner perspective intact. The full documentation lives at typeframe.net, with all the CAD files and electronics details on GitHub. It’s the kind of project that invites participation rather than demanding expertise, which feels increasingly rare in maker spaces that sometimes forget not everyone solders for fun.

The broader question is whether dedicated writing devices actually help people write more. The answer seems to be yes, but not because of any technical magic. Sitting down at a machine that only does one thing creates a kind of ritual commitment. You’re not just opening a document – you’re physically moving to a different device that exists solely for this purpose. It’s closer to the experience of sitting down at a typewriter or picking up a pen, except what you write is instantly digital, searchable, and portable. The AlphaSmart Neo proved there’s real demand for this experience, and projects like Typeframe are making it accessible to anyone willing to spend a weekend with a soldering iron and some determination.

The post This Open-Source Retropunk Computer Solves Distraction by Removing Everything Except Writing first appeared on Yanko Design.

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