MNT Pocket Reform ================= I noticed that the MNT Pocket Reform crowdfunding has been running for a few days [1]. It already reached the funding goal but they are still open for further support. The device is smaller than the "full" (12.5") MNT Reform and about 50% lighter (it is said to be under 1 kg). It has 7" screen (the device is actually bigger than that because screen bezel is considerable). Anyway, it can use the same CPU cards as the big Reform and has a similar level of hackability. From my experience the Reform is a solid device with a good keyboard and I expect that the Pocket one will not be much worse. I read that some people are unhappy from keyboard layout of the big Reform (though I do not know if they have had any possibility to try it in person) and the Pocket added another level y having an ortholinear keyboard (so fast writers may wave problems with it). Bad writers like me will probably find it as bad as any other keyboard. And the Esc key is in the top left edge so vi(1) users will be served! The Pocket has pretty modern set of ports (too much for my liking) a pair of USB-C, a microHDMI and an industrial Ethernet port. Adapters for more traditional interfaces (USB-A, HDMI/DVI, Ethernet, audio jack) of course exist. The positive thing is that one of these USB-C supports Power Delivery so a fairy standard power adapter can be used. There is an optional support for 4G/5G connections, too. The Reform will be shipped with an updated CPU board (faster, slightly less power hungry, with 8GB of RAM and with both WiFi and Bluetooth chips integrated) but will be able to use the old CPU which was default for the older "big" reform (it was no WiFi/Bluetooth integrated anyway but the Ethernet and the HDMI will work with it). The expected battery life is 4 hours. It's not much but I expect that it is with the WiFi/Bluetooth on. The original Reform is not much better (with bigger battery capacity but with bigger screen, of course) and people somewhat live with it. Maybe it's not as big deal as it may look. On the positive side, it is an open hardware with sources of almost everything (including the CPU boards but not the CPUs themselves, I think). There is no microphone/camera integrated (you have to connect yours if you are going to use it) which is a bonus for people who use tapes to cover cameras on their laptops. The hard aluminium casing adds some protection but the device is not waterproof not dustproof in anyway. But the passive cooling (no fans) may help here a bit. What do you thing about this device? References: [1] https://www.crowdsupply.com/mnt/pocket-reform [2] https://community.mnt.re