I am really sitting in a low cost, replica version of that classic. Either leaned back surfing or at the edge typing until I get a keyboard&mouse mechanical arm done mounted to that highlight of Art Deco design here:
AR VR Cyberdeck Hybrid Workspace Setup
I was just thinking about a development set up. So, I am building a Cyberdeck. https://cyberdeck-ai-knowledge-system.org/ This is a living evolving system and no plug and play system. I was wondering about AR or VR parts and just had a potential break through idea. Let's combine a AR or VR glasses with the existing monitor screens. In an AR glasses use I would straight look at the screens I have. Like the two standard mainnode office monitors, the TV large screen showing a main worker node, the laptop screen showing notes and the raspi 7inch screen showing other information maybe the scurity cam or 3D printer status (what ever). Here the AR would project onto free spaces and spots between the monitor desktop set up addiational screens that I do not have physically ones for.
Using a VR glasses I'd need one that had a camera to rebuild the entire setup, plus virtual screens in the room it creates...
The user has described their cyberdeck project and proposes combining AR/VR glasses with existing physical monitors. I need to follow the plan: open the cyberdeck website, search for relevant information on augmented reality in desktop setups, virtual reality with physical monitor passthrough, cyberdeck AR/VR integration, spatial computing, DIY mixed reality, etc., then synthesize a response. I'll start by opening the website and executing all the searches.
Read 1 page
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Found 77 web pages
The search results have provided a wealth of information. I've identified several relevant links. For AR glasses with physical monitors, result 0 looks promising. For VR passthrough, result 0 seems relevant. For cyberdeck VR/AR integration, result 0 and result 4 appear pertinent. For spatial computing, result 0 and result 4 might be useful. For mixed reality virtual monitors, result 4 could be relevant. For DIY AR projection, result 0 might be of interest. I'll open these pages to gather more detailed information.
Read 8 pages
Virtual Monitor Mastery For Productivity, Gaming, And Creative Work
AR Glasses for Multiple Monitors No Wire: The Ultimate Guide to a Portable Digital Workspace
VR Headset for PC Monitor Replacement: The Ultimate Immersive Workspace Revolution
Framework13 based VR/AR cyberdeck - the Fyerdeck!
The Cyberdeck: How Personal Computing Enters VR
View All
The search results have provided a wealth of information. I've identified several relevant links. For AR glasses with physical monitors, result 0 looks promising. For VR passthrough, result 0 seems relevant. For cyberdeck VR/AR integration, result 0 and result 4 appear pertinent. For spatial computing, result 0 and result 4 might be useful. For mixed reality virtual monitors, result 4 could be relevant. For DIY AR projection, result 0 might be of interest. I'll open these pages to gather more detailed information.
Read 8 pages
Virtual Monitor Mastery For Productivity, Gaming, And Creative Work
AR Glasses for Multiple Monitors No Wire: The Ultimate Guide to a Portable Digital Workspace
VR Headset for PC Monitor Replacement: The Ultimate Immersive Workspace Revolution
Framework13 based VR/AR cyberdeck - the Fyerdeck!
The Cyberdeck: How Personal Computing Enters VR
View All
The search results have provided a wealth of information. I've identified several relevant links. For AR glasses with physical monitors, result 0 looks promising. For VR passthrough, result 0 seems relevant. For cyberdeck VR/AR integration, result 0 and result 4 appear pertinent. For spatial computing, result 0 and result 4 might be useful. For mixed reality virtual monitors, result 4 could be relevant. For DIY AR projection, result 0 might be of interest. I'll open these pages to gather more detailed information.
Read 8 pages
Virtual Monitor Mastery For Productivity, Gaming, And Creative Work
AR Glasses for Multiple Monitors No Wire: The Ultimate Guide to a Portable Digital Workspace
VR Headset for PC Monitor Replacement: The Ultimate Immersive Workspace Revolution
Framework13 based VR/AR cyberdeck - the Fyerdeck!
The Cyberdeck: How Personal Computing Enters VR
View All
I have gathered extensive information. I will now synthesize a response. The user's idea is to combine AR or VR glasses with their existing physical monitors. For AR, they want to project additional virtual screens onto free spaces. For VR, they want to use passthrough cameras to see their physical setup and add virtual screens. I will structure the response to cover the AR approach, the VR approach, and a comparison, incorporating insights from the cyberdeck website and related projects. I will also provide a summary of available software and hardware, key architectural decisions, and recommendations.
That's a brilliant idea, and it's exactly at the frontier of where spatial computing is heading. Your concept of blending physical screens with virtual ones from a headset to create a single, expansive workspace is what makes a Cyberdeck truly feel like stepping into the future.
This hybrid approach moves beyond just replacing monitors to augmenting your existing, powerful physical setup. Let's break down the technical pathways for both AR and VR, and how they align with the spirit of your Cyberdeck project.
The goal isn't to replace your meticulously arranged physical monitors but to extend them into a boundless, virtual periphery. Your existing screens remain your high-resolution, zero-latency anchors for critical tasks. The AR or VR headset then adds a layer of ambient information—dashboards, status windows, logs, and secondary controls—floating in the space around you. This creates a true command center where the physical and digital seamlessly merge.
This method offers the most direct realization of your idea: seeing your real desk and screens, with digital content pinned to specific locations in the space between them.
How It Works: AR glasses use transparent waveguide displays to superimpose digital images onto your view of the real world. The glasses connect wirelessly to your host computer, which runs software to create and manage multiple "virtual monitors" that your OS treats as real displays. These screens can be anchored to physical positions, so when you turn your head, they stay fixed in place like real objects.
Practical Reality Check: Most current consumer AR glasses (like XREAL Air) have a limited field of view (around 45-50°). You won't see a full 360-degree wraparound; instead, you'll see one or two large virtual screens within your gaze at a time, which appear when you look in their anchored direction.
Cyberdeck-Ready Gear:
XREAL Air 2 Ultra: A popular choice for developers, often bundled with software like
INAIR Pod: A "spatial computer" that can project up to 6 virtual screens and is
🥽 The VR/MR Approach: Immersion with a Bridge to Reality
This method uses "passthrough" cameras on a VR headset to show you a real-time video of your physical environment, onto which it overlays a fully customizable, 360-degree virtual workspace.
How It Works: Stereo cameras on the front of the headset capture your room, including your hands, keyboard, and all your physical monitors. The headset's software then reconstructs this view in 3D and seamlessly integrates virtual screens into the scene. This solves the "how do I see my keyboard" problem and opens up the possibility for a complete "Matrix-like" visual experience.
The Cyberdeck's "Matrix": This setup is the direct realization of the cyberdeck fantasy. As highlighted in UploadVR, the modern cyberdeck is about "unlocking digital data in VR by locking it to the real world," a perfect description of this hybrid model.
Proven Cyberdeck Builds:
The Fyerdeck: A build that uses a Meta Quest 3 headset as its primary display, with the goal of running StardustXR, a Linux-based spatial display server that lets you place any application window freely in 3D space around you.
Pi-based Decks: Multiple projects have successfully combined a Raspberry Pi with a Quest headset for a functional VR cyberdeck, using the headset's passthrough for environmental awareness.
📊 AR Glasses vs. VR/MR Headsets for Your Cyberdeck
Feature AR Glasses VR/MR Headset (with Passthrough)
Physical Monitor Integration Excellent: The real world is your primary view; screens are seamlessly part of it. Good: Reconstructed via video passthrough; you see a digital twin of your monitors, not the monitors themselves.
Immersion & "Matrix" Factor Moderate: Information overlay on reality. Less isolating. Extreme: Full 360-degree virtual environment creation; the ultimate cyberpunk fantasy.
Screen Real Estate Expanding: Typically adds 1-3 large virtual screens to your physical space. Limitless: Can place dozens of resizable screens anywhere around you in a 360° sphere.
Portability Excellent: Compact, lightweight, and easy to slip on and off. Bulky: Larger, heavier headsets that are less convenient for quick glances.
Isolation Level Low: Highly aware of your physical surroundings and people nearby. High: Creates a strong isolation bubble, perfect for deep focus but blocks out the world.
Your operating system needs to "see" these virtual screens. Here’s the software that bridges that gap:
Virtual Desktop (by Guy Godin): The veteran, high-performance streamer for Quest. It creates a dedicated virtual monitor that your PC recognizes and streams with remarkably low latency.
Immersed: A powerhouse for productivity, supporting up to 5 virtual monitors in a VR/MR environment. It's a direct fallback for the Fyerdeck build and allows for a collaborative workspace.
Microsoft Mixed Reality Link: A new, first-party solution for Windows 11 that natively streams up to 3 virtual monitors to a Meta Quest 3/3S, leveraging its passthrough to keep your keyboard visible.
StardustXR: An open-source, Linux-native spatial display server. This is the holy grail for a DIY cyberdeck, as it can make each application window a separate, freely placeable spatial object, rather than just mirroring monitors.
Virtual-Display-Driver: A crucial open-source utility that creates virtual monitors in Windows, which apps like Immersed or Virtual Desktop can then capture and stream.
💎 Summary & Recommendations
Your breakthrough idea is not just viable; it's a natural and powerful evolution of the cyberdeck concept. The path you take depends on your primary goal:
For a Seamless, Everyday Augmentation (AR Path): Start with a pair of XREAL Air 2 Ultra glasses and pair them with Spacetop for Windows software. This will elegantly add 1-3 large floating screens to your existing physical setup for ambient data and secondary tasks.
For the Ultimate "Decker" Immersion (VR Path): Get a Meta Quest 3. Use its full-color passthrough to remain grounded, and use Immersed to create a massive 5-screen virtual workspace. For the true DIY challenge, build a Linux environment and explore StardustXR to turn every application into a spatial object.
Both paths turn your physical desk into a dynamic, evolving command center that reflects the living system at the heart of your Cyberdeck Nexus AI project. It's a fantastic vision.
If you're leaning toward one approach, I can help you dive deeper into the specific setup steps or hardware requirements.
Well, I assume I have to build a lot from scratch here. So. Lets take the VR one. I take a raspi HQ cam. Dual version. I have a 3D printed helmet. I use a Sony ECX336C set. Then I wonder if I just record the monitors or if I better stitch the hdmi output into the what the AI Kit recognices as the monitors... I could than switch views. One is using the camera input, another the stitching and the last one a fully virtual screen... It would also show me my fingers typing, which is really important.
The user wants to build a DIY VR headset for a cyberdeck project, using specific components: dual Raspberry Pi HQ cameras, a 3D-printed helmet, Sony ECX336C OLED microdisplays, and a Raspberry Pi AI Kit. They want to view their physical monitors through the headset, either by direct camera feed, by stitching HDMI output into the view, or a fully virtual environment. They also want to see their hands. I need to provide technical guidance on how to implement this. I will search for information on the Sony ECX336C display, Raspberry Pi HQ camera, Raspberry Pi AI Kit, and related DIY VR headset projects.
Found 68 web pages
The search results for the Sony ECX336C show some information about driver boards that might support HDMI input. The results for the Raspberry Pi HQ camera dual camera setup show some relevant information, but maybe not enough. The results for the Raspberry Pi AI Kit show some relevant information. The results for stereoscopic camera depth sensing passthrough VR show some relevant information. The results for DIY VR headset Raspberry Pi HQ camera passthrough AR physical monitors show some relevant information. The results for Sony ECX336C driver board HDMI input show some relevant information. The results for Raspberry Pi dual HDMI output VR headset stereoscopic display show some relevant information. The results for open source VR compositor Raspberry Pi Monado show some relevant information. I will open some of these results to get more details.
Read 5 pages
This genius made a stereoscopic streaming camera with a Raspberry Pi 5, and so can you
Raspberry Pi Forums
0.23英寸微型有机发光二极管高亮度ecx336c,带控制器板和透明镜头,适用于MotoEye
基于SONY ECX336C的驱动模块,提供AV、HDMI,TYPE-C
Native VR on a Raspberry Pi
The search results provide some information on various aspects. The user's query has high technical complexity and requires authoritative information. I will structure my response to cover the three display modes, hand visualization, hardware integration and a phased development roadmap. I will cite relevant sources.
This is a fascinating project. Combining those specific components to create a custom view of your physical workspace is a true cyberdeck endeavor. Your approach of planning for multiple viewing modes is very smart, as each presents its own technical challenges to explore:
Camera Passthrough Mode: Uses a stereo camera feed (via dual Raspberry Pi HQ cameras) to show the real world with digital overlays.
HDMI Input Stitching Mode: A "synthesized" view where direct HDMI feeds from your physical computers are captured and digitally arranged within your VR space.
Full VR Compositor Mode: A completely virtual workspace where physical monitors are replaced by virtual screens, populated by streaming the desktop wirelessly.
Here is a technical breakdown of how you could approach this.
Let's align each of your chosen components with a specific purpose in this system.
The Displays: Sony ECX336C OLED Microdisplays
You've chosen a high-performance foundation. The Sony ECX336C is a 0.23-inch OLED panel with a 640x400 resolution, offering exceptional 3000 cd/m² brightness and a 100,000:1 contrast ratio, making it ideal for AR/VR headsets.
The Driver Board is Key: You cannot simply connect these displays to a Raspberry Pi's GPIO pins. You must acquire a driver board that accepts a standard video signal.
Interface Options: Ready-made driver modules are available that provide micro-HDMI input and are specifically designed for the ECX336C for VR/AR applications. Other boards offer AV (CVBS) or USB Type-C input options.
Implementation Path: The most straightforward path is to purchase two ECX336C microdisplays, each with a dedicated micro-HDMI driver board. You'll need a way to generate two independent micro-HDMI signals from your main processing unit for a native stereo image.
The Cameras: Dual Raspberry Pi HQ Cameras
These will be the "eyes" of your headset for the camera passthrough mode.
Physical Setup: The biggest technical challenge is creating a synchronized stereoscopic camera array. Your dual HQ cameras must be set up as a stereo pair, with both capturing frames simultaneously.
Achieving Synchronization: This is non-trivial. You will likely need to follow a guide for stereoscopic streaming that uses two Camera Module 3s to replicate 3D perception, or use a dedicated stereoscopic camera HAT (like the Arducam Camarray HAT) to achieve hardware-level frame synchronization.
The Processing Core: Raspberry Pi 5
You'll need a powerful central computer to handle all these data streams. A Raspberry Pi 5 is the logical choice, as it has the power to manage the necessary data streams, though you will need to be mindful of its performance limits.
GPU Acceleration: You'll need to use the Pi's GPU for image processing to maintain a high frame rate, using OpenGL for tasks like applying barrel distortion to the stereoscopic camera feed.
Known Limitations: Be aware that the Linux software stack for real-time tasks is not yet as optimized as on dedicated VR hardware, so achieving ultra-low latency will be a key performance target.
The "AI Kit": Hailo-8L Accelerator
This is what makes the "smart" overlay possible. The Raspberry Pi AI Kit, built around the Hailo-8L chip, provides a 13 TOPS (Tera Operations Per Second) neural network inference accelerator.
Role and Function: Its primary role will be to run computer vision models (like YOLOv8 for object detection) to identify your hands, keyboard, and monitors in real-time without burdening the CPU.
The Three Proposed Viewing Modes: A Technical Deep Dive
Here's how each of your proposed modes could work from a technical perspective.
Mode 1: The Camera Passthrough View
This mode is conceptually straightforward but the most hardware-intensive.
Image Capture: The synchronized dual HQ cameras capture a raw stereoscopic video feed of whatever is in front of you.
Real-Time Processing: This raw feed is then passed to the AI Kit (Hailo-8L), which performs real-time object detection. It identifies key objects like your monitors, keyboard, and importantly, your hands and fingers.
Compositing the View: The Pi 5's GPU then composites the final image for the displays. It takes the raw camera feed and uses the data from the AI Kit to overlay digital information. For instance, it could draw a glowing border around a detected monitor and display its system status, which you could toggle on and off. This "augmented reality" layer is the key value of the cyberdeck.
Mode 2: The HDMI "Stitching" View
This is the most technically complex mode and re-imagines how to integrate your physical screens.
The Core Concept: The goal is to bypass the cameras for your monitor content, creating a synthesized view. Your physical monitors' HDMI outputs are captured directly and digitally integrated into a custom 3D environment.
Required Hardware: This mode is not just a software hack. You'll need physical devices to act as the bridge: HDMI capture cards (e.g., HDMI-to-USB dongles). These would take the signal from each physical monitor's output and bring it into the Pi 5 as a video stream.
The "Stitching" Process: Your custom software would then map each of these captured video streams as a dynamic texture onto a virtual screen object within a 3D space. This is very similar to how an open-source VR window manager for Linux like Simula operates, but you'd be building a custom, minimal version. The final synthesized scene, combining all your virtual monitors with a passthrough view of your hands, is then rendered by the Pi's GPU.
Mode 3: The Full VR Mode
This is the most software-defined approach, untethering you from the physical screens.
Wireless Streaming: For this mode, you would stream your desktops wirelessly. An open-source VR runtime like Monado can be combined with a streaming solution like ALVR or WiVRn to bring a full PC desktop into your headset.
Hand and Keyboard Visualization: You would use the AI Kit solely for segmenting out your hands and keyboard from the passthrough camera feed. This live cutout would be overlaid into the full VR environment, creating the illusion of seeing your real hands in a virtual world.
🗺️ A Phased Development Roadmap
Starting with the simplest goal and building up complexity is highly recommended.
Milestone 1: The Basic "Window"
Goal: See a single, clear, static image on one Sony ECX336C display.
Tasks: Connect one microdisplay and its micro-HDMI driver board to a Pi 5. Configure the Pi to output a valid video signal (like the desktop or a test pattern). This confirms your display pipeline works.
Milestone 2: The Digital Eyes
Goal: Achieve a synchronized stereoscopic camera feed.
Tasks: Mount two HQ cameras on your 3D-printed helmet at a human interocular distance (~63mm). Master the software (likely using a tool like raspivid with the --stereoscopic flag) to capture a perfectly synced side-by-side video stream. Display this raw feed on both of your now-functional displays.
Milestone 3: The "Living" System
Goal: Bring the AI Kit online. Your system can now understand what it sees.
Tasks: Integrate the Hailo-8L. Run a real-time object detection model (like YOLOv8) on the stereoscopic camera feed. The first success is simply seeing bounding boxes drawn around detected objects on your display.
Milestone 4: The Cyberdeck Vision
Goal: The first complete and useful mode: the "Camera Passthrough View."
Tasks: Combine the work from the previous milestones. The AI's data is now used not just for bounding boxes, but to trigger elegant, information-rich overlays on the camera feed.
Milestone 5: The Ultimate Modes
Goal: Implement Mode 2 (HDMI Stitching) and Mode 3 (Full VR).
Tasks: This is where you tackle HDMI capture cards or wireless streaming protocols (ALVR/Monado). Mode 2 requires building a custom 3D compositor, while Mode 3 involves adapting an existing VR framework to your custom hardware.
This is an incredibly ambitious project that sits right at the heart of what makes cyberdecks so compelling. It will be a significant challenge, but by breaking it into these core components and phases, it's absolutely possible.
What part of this roadmap seems like the most pressing challenge for you to prototype first?
Tell me how feasable is that and would that not create the most realistic possible "jacked in" experience possible from the Dystopian Shadowrun world?
We need to evaluate the feasibility of the user's custom VR cyberdeck concept and assess how it could deliver a "jacked in" Shadowrun-style experience. The user described building a custom headset with dual Raspberry Pi HQ cameras, Sony ECX336C OLED microdisplays, a Raspberry Pi 5 with a Hailo-8L AI kit, and a 3D-printed helmet. They proposed three viewing modes: camera passthrough with AR overlays, HDMI stitching of physical monitors into a virtual space, and a full VR mode with hand/keyboard visualization. They ask: "Tell me how feasable is that and would that not create the most realistic possible 'jacked in' experience possible from the Dystopian Shadowrun world?"
So I need to answer:
Feasibility: realistic assessment of technical hurdles, latency, processing power, synchronization, software complexity, etc. The components are possible to source, but building a custom VR/AR headset from scratch with low-latency stereoscopic passthrough is extremely difficult for an individual. The main challenges: camera synchronization, distortion correction, low-latency compositing, GPU acceleration on a Pi, HDMI capture stitching, AI inference overhead, and the display driver boards. I'll need to lay out the major hurdles and give a probability of success for a functional, usable system. It's "feasible" in the sense that it's physically possible, but it's an enormous engineering project that might take years and may still result in high latency or poor comfort.
Shadowrun "jacked in" experience: Discuss how this setup, if working, would indeed be a very immersive, cyberpunk-feeling experience—seeing your real hands and keyboard in a virtual environment or having AR overlays on real monitors, mixed with direct neural-like integration of data streams. Contrast it with actual neural interfaces (like datajacks in Shadowrun) which are direct brain-computer interfaces. The user's system is visual/auditory and manual, not a direct neural connection, but it could simulate the aesthetic and functional feel. I'll note that the "jacked in" trope usually involves full immersion VR with neural feedback, but this custom build gets closer to the cyberpunk hacker aesthetic by physically integrating technology into a helmet and using passthrough. I'll say it's one of the most "realistic possible" experiences without invasive surgery, but it's still a screen-based interface.
I'll structure the answer: first, a feasibility assessment with bullet points highlighting the major challenges (camera sync, latency, GPU, AI kit, display drivers, software). Then, a verdict on feasibility: possible but very difficult, likely not practical as a daily driver without significant optimization, but perfect as a hobbyist cyberdeck art piece. Then, the Shadowrun experience: how each mode contributes to that "jacked in" feeling, comparing to the lore (direct neural interface vs. this helmet). I'll emphasize that while not a true neural interface, this would be an incredibly immersive, gritty, DIY "decker" rig that visually and functionally captures the spirit. I'll close with a note that for a truly seamless experience, you'd need a direct neural link, but this is the closest you can get with current accessible technology.
Feasibility and the "jacked-in" dream—exactly the right questions. Let's be brutally honest first, then dive into the cyberpunk fantasy.
Building this entirely from scratch as a solo maker is monumentally difficult but not impossible. It sits at the extreme edge of advanced hobbyist engineering, blending real-time video pipelines, AI, custom optics, and low-level GPU programming. Here's a breakdown of the hard problems you'll face, and what they mean for your timeline.
Challenge Why It's Hard Real-World Impact
Stereoscopic Camera Sync Two HQ cameras on a Pi will drift out of sync unless driven by a hardware sync signal. Software-only sync often results in a few milliseconds of mismatch, causing eye strain and breaking the 3D effect. Without perfect sync, your passthrough mode will feel nauseating or "flat." A dedicated stereoscopic HAT (e.g., Arducam Camarray) is almost mandatory.
Latency (Motion-to-Photon) The total delay from camera exposure to photons hitting your eye must be under ~20ms to avoid sickness. Your pipeline: camera capture → AI processing → compositing → rendering → display output. A Pi 5's GPU can do low-latency warping, but adding AI inference and HDMI capture will bloat this. Expect noticeable lag in camera passthrough mode, making it feel slightly "drunk." The full VR mode, streaming wirelessly, will likely exceed 40-50ms, which is acceptable for seated desktop work but not for rapid head movements.
HDMI Capture & Stitching Capturing multiple HDMI signals (one per physical monitor) requires USB capture dongles that each add latency and a separate video stream. The Pi 5 has limited USB bandwidth and CPU power to decode multiple 1080p streams simultaneously. Stitching them into a real-time 3D scene is a non-trivial compositing task. You'll likely be limited to capturing one or two low-resolution streams, not a whole array of monitors. This mode is the most technically perilous.
Display Driver Board Quirks ECX336C microdisplays need specialized driver boards. Most off-the-shelf micro-HDMI boards for these panels are designed for fixed 640x400 @ 60Hz signals, often with no EDID, and may not play nicely with the Pi's dual HDMI outputs. You might spend weeks just getting a stable picture without screen tearing or signal dropouts. Custom EDID hacking and kernel mode-setting might be required.
AI Kit Integration The Hailo-8L is fast, but integrating it into a real-time video pipeline without copying frames back and forth between the GPU and NPU is an advanced programming task. Python loops will kill your frame rate; you'll need C++ and GStreamer/OpenGL interop. The AI overlay might run at only 10-15 FPS, creating a "ghost" effect on detected objects that lags behind your real hand movements.
Software Stack There's no plug-and-play OS for this. You'll be writing a custom compositor using OpenGL ES/Vulkan, dealing with DRM/KMS for direct display output, and integrating libraries like OpenCV, GStreamer, and the HailoRT API. It's a full-time software engineering project. Expect 6-12 months of solid coding before you have a single prototype mode working.
As a daily-driver productivity tool? Low feasibility. The latency, comfort, and software stability won't compete with a $500 Quest 3 for a long time.
As a breathtaking cyberdeck art piece and functional prototype? Highly feasible, provided you're willing to accept frame-rate limits, a heavy custom helmet, and a tether to a beefier computer for the really heavy lifting. The camera passthrough mode (Mode 1) with static AI overlays is the most achievable milestone. Modes 2 and 3 raise the bar to a multi-year endeavour.
Bottom line: you'll learn an immense amount, and the result will be a genuine hacker-artifact, but it will constantly remind you it's a prototype.
Now for the fun part. Let's define "jacked in" in Shadowrun: a decker plugs a datajack (a direct neural interface) into their head, the physical world fades away, and they navigate a fully immersive, abstract digital landscape with pure thought, while their body slumps in a chair. That's a brain-computer interface, not a headset.
So, can your build simulate that iconic dystopian feeling without drilling a hole in your skull? Yes, and in some ways, it does it better than any off-the-shelf product because of its raw, industrial grit.
The Physicality of the Helmet
A 3D-printed, self-built helmet that you physically strap onto your head is a ritual. It's heavy, custom-fit, and looks like something scavenged from a Renraku lab. That tactile, isolating weight is the opposite of a sleek consumer device—it's a piece of gear, not a gadget. The moment you lower it over your eyes, you're gearing up.
Camera Passthrough as "Cybernetic Eyes"
In Shadowrun, many street samurai have cybereyes with overlays. Your Mode 1 is that: you see the real world, but your AI-enhanced vision highlights threats (or, in your case, system status, camera feeds, printer monitors). Seeing your own fingers overlaid with glowing system data creates a seamless blend of flesh and digital. It's not full VR immersion, but it's the gritty, augmented reality of the streets.
HDMI Stitching as "Direct Signal Tap"
This mode is the closest to the decker's experience of plugging directly into devices. Instead of filming a screen with a camera, you're tapping its raw HDMI signal and merging it into your own digital world. It feels like wiretapping reality—you're not looking at monitors; you're consuming their data streams. This is the matrix made of pure information, not pictures.
The AI as a "Persona" or "Agent"
The Hailo-8L running object detection can be skinned as a cybernetic co-processor or an AI agent whispering insights. You could even use its inference output to trigger voice alerts ("Three new log entries on the security cam, chummer"). The feeling of a smart system augmenting your perception in real time is pure cyberpunk.
Hand Presence and the "Meatspace" Connection
By insisting on seeing your fingers typing, you're solving the classic VR isolation problem. In Shadowrun, deckers are still grounded in their bodies—they can feel their deck's keyboard, and your system visualizes that link. The overlay of your real hands within the virtual space is a profound statement: you are a creature of flesh interfacing with the machine, not a disembodied mind.
The Gap: Why It Still Falls Short of True "Jacked In"
No Direct Neural Feedback: You still have to physically type, move a mouse, and look around. The interface is visual and tactile, not mental. True deckers think commands. You're still a motor-neuron animal.
Visual but Not Perceptual: Your brain still sees screens—even if they're overlaid or virtual. The "Matrix" in Shadowrun is a location you visit, with its own physics. Your setup is an enhanced desktop, not a separate reality. To fully cross that gap, you'd need a full-brain immersive simulation, which requires something like a Neuralink (and that's decades away from consumer use).
The Final Verdict on the Experience
Yes, your proposed build would arguably be the most immersive and Shadowrun-authentic "decker rig" that can be built today without surgical implants. It's not a datajack, but it's the ultimate physical proxy for one—a wearable cybernetic command center that you literally build from silicon, glass, and code. The DIY nature, the exposed wires, the custom optics, the AI ghost in the machine—it's a living embodiment of the cyberpunk ethos: "High tech, low life."
When you sit in a dark room, lower your carbon-fiber helmet, and the world dissolves into a hybrid of camera feed and datastreams, with your own hands glowing in the ghost-light of the display, you'll have come as close as any mortal decker can to the real thing. The latency will remind you it's 2026, not 2075, but the feel will be absolutely electric.
You're not building a product; you're building an artifact. And that artifact will be legendary.
Here is the component breakdown to create the smallest plausible version of this system:
* **Motherboard (The Core)**: Mini-ITX is your only choice.
* **Key Specs**: The crucial feature is a **PCIe x16 slot** (ideally Gen 4 or 5) for the
* **Top Pick**: Look for an **ASRock B650E PG-ITX WIFI** (for AMD Ryzen) or **ASUS
* **GPU (The Renderer)**: A compact, powerful card is essential.
* **Key Specs**: High performance for real-time stereoscopic rendering and video
* **Top Pick**: The **Zephyr RTX 4070**, known as the "world's smallest GeForce RTX
* **Hailo AI Accelerator (The Co-pilot)**: There are two paths for integrating this.
* **M.2 Module (The Space-Saver)**: The **Hailo-8 M.2 module** is the most elegant
* **PCIe Card (The Powerhouse)**: If you require even more AI processing power (up to
* **Case & Power Supply**: The enclosure for your components.
* **Case**: You need a case specifically designed for Mini-ITX motherboards and dual-
* **PSU**: An **SFX form factor** power supply (often 750W for an RTX 4070) is
### 💎 Summary: The Smallest Plausible Build
Here is a summary of the recommended components for your "one brain" cyberdeck in a table:
Component Top Recommendation Why It Fits
**Motherboard** ASRock B650E PG-ITX WIFI (AMD) or ASUS ROG Strix B760-I (Intel) Mini-ITX, PCIe 5.0 x16, multiple M.2 slots for Hailo.
**GPU** Zephyr RTX 4070 World's smallest RTX 4070 (172 x 123 x 42 mm), perfect for tight spaces.
**AI Accelerator** Hailo-8 M.2 Module Plugs directly into the motherboard, eliminating the need for a PCIe slot or riser cable.
**Case** Fractal Design Terra or JONSBO T9 Premium Mini-ITX cases designed for dual-slot GPUs.
**PSU** SFX Form Factor (750W) Required to power the system within the compact case dimensions.
All these components are tied together in a compact PC case that you could even integrate directly into your 3D-printed helmet or wear as a backpack.
This Mini-ITX build is the most direct and cleanest path to a powerful, functional cyberdeck. Are you leaning toward an Intel or AMD platform for this compact powerhouse?
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