We have seen a few projects that convert a rotary dial for use with modern technology, but this one adds a new twist to the mix: it uses Bluetooth 4.0. [Silent] used a Nordic Semiconductor NRF51 DK development board for the project, which was built from the Nordic SDK source code for creating an HID (Human Interface Device). After what he claims was an hour or so of hacking, he was able to get this Arduino-compatible SoC dev board to detect the pulses from the rotary dial, then pass the appropriate number to a connected device as a key press. This means that his design should work with any device that has Bluetooth 4.0 support. It is powered from a big dry cell because, to quote [Silent], “small coin batteries are not hipster enough”.
It’s a simple project, and we have seen rotary cell phones before, but this still is ripe for expansion. You could either use a smaller, cheaper version of the Nordic chip at the center of this hack, as most of the dev board features aren’t used. Or you could do some more hacking, add support for the Bluetooth HSP headset profile, then wire it up to a vintage phone for the most hipster Bluetooth headset ever. We can’t wait until we see a hipster sitting in a coffee shop banging away on a typewriter and answering this. Get to it, people!
I like it
That will be my next we project, the most difficult part will be to find a rotary dial
While not exactly cheap, ebay and shopgoodwill can get you rotary phones for <$20 shipped
Any sufficiently advanced technology includes a dial!
In old movies about the future computers have big button and switches not touchscreen but now that i think about it maybe they were set on a hipster town in the future.
That kind of service handset should be ideal for this project: http://masterbator.netszok.pl/demobil0784.jpg
Has anyone ever made a rotary dial keyboard before?