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If you want to turn HDMI video into art, then you might be interested in my Pixel Wrangler project: github.com/osresearch/pixel-wr

Maybe you have an old Mac that you want to use as an HDMI monitor? The Pixel Wrangler can do that!

LED matrices are also a good match for the Pixel Wrangler.

Vector displays are maybe not the best match for the Pixel Wrangler, although it can be made to work...

Character matrices are also a fun challenge for FPGA video processing; the Pixel Wrangler can do this too.

Booting Linux using the signboard from the side of a train as the display? Easy with the Pixel Wrangler.

never in my life was i expecting to be rickrolled by a 16x2 OLED display. cool stuff @th! would totally buy >v<

@th Curious if you think the Pixel Wrangler could drive a Mac Portable active matrix display? I have a broken Mac Portable that might make a good donor to put a RaspPi to run MiniVMac on.

theregister.com/2010/11/09/mac

@paulrickards 640x480x1 fits in the PixelWrangler frame buffer, so probably? The only question is how many IO pins are on the blue connector and do they need level shifting.

@paulrickards I’m also prototyping a Pi optimised version of the pixel wrangler than can use the DPI port instead of the HDMI and will have more IO available for weird panels.

@th It looks like it’s a 26 pin connector as seen in this picture. I can’t find datasheets for the two types of Toshiba chips on the back but it looks like one is for rows and the other type is for columns. It looks like they were also used in the Ti-81 graphing calculator.

regmedia.co.uk/2010/11/08/port

@paulrickards the same Toshiba T7900 and T7778A were used in the Tandy 1400FD/HD laptop LCD, although I haven't found a pinout: lo-tech.co.uk/wiki/Tandy_1400F

@th Interesting: the DA15 video port on the back of the Mac Portable isn't a standard Mac video port-- it's a digital output that closely matches the pins to the LCD display.

@paulrickards it looks like the "VIDEO" IC is a custom Apple VLSI chip (VGT7737). Does your Mac Portable work well enough to flash something on the display so that the timings for CL1, CL2, FLM and BLANK can be measured?

@th Unfortunately no. There's some other issue that I've yet to reveal, even after recapping, cleaning, repairing traces, and two new "hybrid" power modules.

I'd need to get someone else with a working Portable to take some measurements.

@paulrickards amazing! those are all achievable goals with the Pixel Wrangler, with some minor support hardware to turn PWM into the contrast voltage.

@th Sweet! What's the best way to get started? Do you have any finished PIxel Wrangler boards for sale? Or would an UPduino be a good starting point?

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