TR-109 Raspberry Picorder 2 Really Nails The Star Trek Aesthetic

Star Trek famously showed its medical staff using a multifunctional device by the name of the tricorder. While no such devices are regularly used by current medical staff in this timeline, the concept is nonetheless appealing to fans of the show. [directive0] is one such person, and built himself a replica by the name of the Picorder 2.

Picorder 2 is inspired by the tricorders from Star Trek: The Next Generation. The name is an indication that this isn’t a first attempt; it builds upon an earlier project based on the models from the original series. It’s built with a nifty 3D printed case that folds in half, just like the real deal. Plenty of attention to detail has been invested in the decals and backlit controls to really complete the look.

Inside, a Raspberry Pi Zero W runs the show, paired with a bunch of sensors and accessories to get the job done. The human interface is via capacitive touch, and data is displayed on an ST7735 LCD display for output. The graphing software [directive0] built does a great job of creating a Trekesque aesthetic, displaying data from various in-built sensors, such as temperature, humidity, and barometric pressure. There’s also a low-resolution thermal imaging camera – and it’s hard to get more sci-fi than that.

While we’re a ways off from medically-useful tricorders, it’s nonetheless fun to see replica props that have some life and functionality built into them. The tricorder remains a popular build – we see them pretty regularly! – and we can’t wait to see where the fandom takes them over the next few years.  Video after the break.

[via Tom’s Hardware, thanks to Itay for the tip!]

9 thoughts on “TR-109 Raspberry Picorder 2 Really Nails The Star Trek Aesthetic

      1. My remote probe uses bluetooth, it’s strapped to my wrist. In theory it measures heart rate, blood pressure, blood oxygen, temperature, activity and inactivity. I do not have any illusions that it is particularly accurate, but I guess you could get the same cheapo smartwatch and make a proof of concept or toy medical tricorder with it.

      2. Indeed they did. The one used by Doctor McCoy, and his friends, produces an interesting bleeping sound. A well trained physician, which despite Bone’s grumbling he is, can sometimes understand it directly. But most of them it was displayed on a medical one.

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