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by mewse 2058 days ago
I ordered this one:

https://www.waveshare.com/product/raspberry-pi/displays/e-pa...

It’s the same size as the screen on most Kindle devices; 12cm by 9cm.

So it’s not large except in comparison to most e-paper displays out there, which seem to most often come in at 6cm by 3cm or smaller. And it’s not exactly cheap by any stretch of the imagination, but for me it was at the ‘sweet spot’ between size and cost, as stuff bigger than this gets expensive fast.

Note that I haven’t actually received the display yet and can’t vouch for its quality or usability. But for what it’s worth, that’s the one I ordered.

1 comments

How do you plan to power this one, if it's hung on the wall?
Initially, I’m going to try to use a power cable in a color that matches the wall. The spot I have in mind is above some knee-high shelves, so I’d probably only need to run the cable for half a meter before it vanishes behind them. Hopefully it shouldn’t be too jarringly visible! As I’m renting the apartment, I can’t really poke holes in the walls to hide cables (sadly).

Alternately, there are some other shelves of a more normal height that I could just set it on top of; the power cable would be much less visible that way.

But I do like the idea of having it on a wall. As you say, the trick is going to be working out how to camouflage the cable.

> I can’t really poke holes in the walls to hide cables (sadly).

I don't know if you've tried and hated it or not, but spackling is surprisingly easy, and most landlords will provide you with matching paint (either free or at cost, depending on your landlord and probably the amount you need). You can patch probably a dozen holes in an hour (only counting active time, not time spent drying) including painting.

It's not fun, but I've resorted to it because spackling nail holes is extremely easy compared to fixing the carnage left behind when one of those "won't mess up your wall" patches doesn't come off cleanly.

It's also worth checking whether "normal wear and tear" is the tenant's responsibility or the landlord's responsibility in your jurisdiction. When I was in SF and looked, it seemed to be largely on the landlord, so they were not allowed to charge for repairing holes considered "normal wear and tear" (which hanging pictures and the like generally was). My readings said the only time you were responsible for them is if there were an excessive number (though excessive wasn't quantified).

Maybe something like these would do (flat adhesive "speaker" cables):

https://www.cableorganizer.com/p/taperwire-flat-speaker-cabl...

You could try tacking some appropriate matching poster board over the wall under it.
This!

We need super-long-life batteries. One day ...

If you don't refresh it too often you could run the display for about a week from a 10000mAh powerbank. Of course then you would need to run it from a microcontroller instead of the rather power-hungry Pi.

It's doable today, just not convenient.

Actually yes - I have a small display that I haven't used for a couple of months and the image is still there. I was thinking about how it would be with a daily refresh.