E-Ink Magic Calendar that automatically syncs to Google Calendar and runs off a battery powered Raspberry Pi Zero

Related tags

HardwareMagInkCal
Overview

MagInkCal

This repo contains the code needed to drive an E-Ink Magic Calendar that uses a battery powered (PiSugar2) Raspberry Pi Zero WH to retrieve events from a Google Calendar, format it into the desired layout, before pushing it to a Waveshare 12.48" tri-color E-Ink display. Note that the code has only been tested on the specific hardware mentioned, and customization of the code is necessary for it to work with other E-Ink displays or Battery/RTC add-ons. That said, enjoy working on your project and hopefully this helps to jump-start your magic calendar journey.

20210924_175459

Background

Back in 2019, I started a thread in Reddit to bounce an idea I had with the community: to replicate the Android Magic Calendar concept that inspired many DIY projects in the subsequent years. But specifically, I wanted it to run on battery so I could position it anywhere in house, and even hang it on the wall without a wire dangling beneath it. I also wanted the parts to be plug and play since I had neither the desire nor the steady hands needed to solder anything. After sitting on that idea for close to a year, I finally got my act together and ordered the parts I needed for this project. I posted another update to Reddit in 2020, but got overwhelmed with life/work so it took me almost another year before posting the full set of instructions and code here. An update was also posted on Reddit to share this with the community.

Hardware Required

How It Works

Through PiSugar2's web interface, the onboard RTC can be set to wake and trigger the RPi to boot up daily at a time of your preference. Upon boot, a cronjob on the RPi is triggered to run a Python script that fetches calendar events from Google Calendar for the next few weeks, and formats them into the desired layout before displaying it on the E-Ink display. The RPi then shuts down to conserve battery. The calendar remains displayed on the E-Ink screen, because well, E-Ink...

Some features of the calendar:

  • Battery life is the big question so I'll address it first. I'm getting around 3-4 weeks before needing to recharge the PiSugar2. I'm fairly happy with this but I'm sure this can be extended if I optimize the code further.
  • Since I had the luxury of using red for the E-Ink display, I used it to highlight the current date, as well as recently added/updated events.
  • I don't like having long bars that span across multiple days for multi-day events, so I chose to display only the start and end dates for those events, and adding small left/right arrows accordingly,
  • Given limited space (oh why are large E-Ink screens still so expensive!) and resolution on the display, I could only show 3 events per day and an indicator (e.g. 4 more) for those not displayed
  • The calendar always starts from the current week, and displays the next four (total 35 days). If the dates cross over to the new month, it's displayed in grey instead of black.

MagInkCal Basics

Setting Up Raspberry Pi Zero

  1. Start by flashing Raspberrypi OS Lite to a MicroSD Card.

  2. After setting up the OS, run the following commmand in the RPi Terminal, and use the raspi-config interface to setup Wifi connection, enable SSH, I2C, SPI, and set the timezone to your location.

sudo raspi-config
  1. Run the following commands in the RPi Terminal to setup the environment to run the Python scripts.
sudo apt update
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
sudo apt-get install chromium-chromedriver
pip3 install --upgrade google-api-python-client google-auth-httplib2 google-auth-oauthlib
pip3 install pytz
pip3 install selenium
pip3 install Pillow
  1. Run the following commands in the RPi Terminal to install the libraries needed to drive the E-Ink display. See this page for more details.
sudo apt-get install python3-pil
sudo pip3 install RPi.GPIO
sudo pip3 install spidev
  1. Run the following commands in the RPi Terminal to install the web interface for PiSugar2 display. See this page for more details. After running the command, you would be able to access the web interface at http://your_raspberry_ip:8421 in your browser. From there you should be able specify when you wish to schedule the PiSugar2 boot up your RPi.
curl http://cdn.pisugar.com/release/Pisugar-power-manager.sh | sudo bash
  1. Download the over the files in this repo to a folder in your PC first.

  2. In order for you to access your Google Calendar events, it's necessary to first grant the access. Follow the instructions here on your PC to get the credentials.json file from your Google API. Don't worry, take your time. I'll be waiting here.

  3. Once done, copy the credentials.json file to the "gcal" folder in this project. Run the following command on your PC. A web browser should appear, asking you to grant access to your calendar. Once done, you should see a "token.pickle" file in your "gcal" folder.

python3 quickstart.py
  1. Copy all the files over to your RPi using your preferred means.

  2. Run the following command in the RPi Terminal to open crontab.

crontab -e
  1. Specifically, add the following command to crontab so that the MagInkCal Python script runs each time the RPi is booted up.
@reboot cd /location/to/your/maginkcal && python3 maginkcal.py
  1. That's all! Your Magic Calendar should now be refreshed at the time interval that you specified in the PiSugar2 web interface!

PS: I'm aware that the instructions above may not be complete, especially when it comes to the Python libraries to be installed, so feel free to ping me if you noticed anything missing and I'll add it to the steps above.

Acknowledgements

  • Quattrocento Font: Font used for the calendar display
  • Bootstrap Calendar CSS: Stylesheet that adapted heavily for the calendar display
  • emagra: For adding in new features, such as 24hr display and multiple calendar selection.
  • /u/aceisace: For the tips on E-Ink development and the InkyCal repo (worth checking out even though I didn't use it for this project).

Contributing

I won't be updating this code much, since it has been serving me well. Nevertheless, feel free to fork the repo and modify it for your own purpose. At the same time, check out other similar projects, such as InkyCal. It's much more polished and also actively developed.

What's Next

Honestly, the cost of this project is way too high for a single purpose device. Personally, I've been looking at E-Ink tablets that emulate the experience of writing on paper, and allow the users to take notes on the go. Those familiar with this range of products would be aware of the reMarkable tablet, Ratta Supernote, Kobo Elipsa and many others. My next project is likely to enhance one of these devices such that the calendar will be displayed when it's not in use. While this is usually possible by manually setting the sleep screen image / screensaver, I'm looking to have the screensaver updated automatically on a daily basis, like how it was done in this project.

This repository hosts the code for Stanford Pupper and Stanford Woofer, Raspberry Pi-based quadruped robots that can trot, walk, and jump.

This repository hosts the code for Stanford Pupper and Stanford Woofer, Raspberry Pi-based quadruped robots that can trot, walk, and jump.

Stanford Student Robotics 1.2k Dec 25, 2022
Add filters (background blur, etc) to your webcam on Linux.

webcam-filters Add filters (background blur, etc) to your webcam on Linux. Video conferencing applications tend to either lack video effects altogethe

Jashandeep Sohi 480 Dec 14, 2022
Shotgrid Toolkit Engine for Gaffer

Shotgun toolkit engine for Gaffer Contact : Diego Garcia Huerta Overview Implementation of a shotgun engine for Gaffer. It supports the classic bootst

Diego Garcia Huerta 12 May 21, 2022
Raspberry Pi Pico development platform for PlatformIO

Raspberry Pi Pico development platform for PlatformIO A few words in the beginning Before experimental please Reinstall the platform Version: 1.0.0 Th

Georgi Angelov 160 Dec 23, 2022
This allows you to record keyboard and mouse input, and play it back using pynput.

Record and Play with Python! This allows you to record keyboard and mouse input, and play it back (with looping) using pynput. It allows for automatio

George Jensen 45 Jan 02, 2023
DNP3 Stalker is a project to analyze and interact with DNP3 devices

DNP3 Stalker Purpose DNP3 Stalker is a project to analyze and interact with DNP3

Cutaway Security, LLC. 2 Feb 10, 2022
Kwcpu - An unobtrusive CPU meter that fits in the default Windows 11 taskbar. Supports up to 32 cores.

kwcpu An unobtrusive CPU meter that fits in the default Windows 11 taskbar. Supports up to 32 cores. kwcpu is provided as a Rainmeter skin. By default

Jay Oster 2 Nov 07, 2022
Andreas Frisch 1 Jan 10, 2022
HACS gives you a powerful UI to handle downloads of all your custom needs.

HACS (Home Assistant Community Store) Manage (Install, track, upgrade) and discover custom elements for Home Assistant directly from the UI. What? HAC

HACS 3.2k Jan 04, 2023
Home Assistant custom integration for e-distribución

e-Distribución is an energy distribution company that covers most of South Spain area. If you live in this area, you probably are able to register into their website to get some information about you

VMG 17 Sep 07, 2022
Universal Xiaomi MIoT integration for Home Assistant

Xiaomi MIoT Raw 简体中文 | English MIoT 协议是小米智能家居从 2018 年起推行的智能设备通信协议规范,此后凡是可接入米家的设备均通过此协议进行通信。此插件按照 MIoT 协议规范与设备通信,实现对设备的状态读取及控制。

1.9k Jan 02, 2023
Authentication provider using Synology DSM users for Home Assistant

Authentication provider using Synology DSM users for Home Assistant The Synology authentication provider lets you authenticate using the users in your

Sam Debruyn 5 Oct 06, 2022
🐱 Petkit feeder components for HomeAssistant

Petkit for HomeAssistant Installing Download and copy custom_components/xiaomi_miot folder to custom_components folder in your HomeAssistant config fo

62 Dec 29, 2022
A modular sequencer based on Pi Pico & EuroPi

PicoSequencer A modular sequencer based on Pi Pico & EuroPi by Zeno Van Moerkerke / Keurslager Kurt For now it is 'only' a trigger sequencer, but I si

5 Oct 27, 2022
Modi2-firmware-updater - MODI+ Firmware Updater With Python

MODI+ Firmware Updater 실행 준비 python3(파이썬3.9 혹은 그 이상의 버전)를 컴퓨터에 설치 python3 -m pip

LUXROBO 1 Feb 04, 2022
Raspberry Pi & Accelerometer with Losant's EEA

Raspberry Pi & Accelerometer with Losant's EEA This is a repository that contains companion code to this EEA How To guide. Each folder is named accord

Losant 1 Oct 29, 2021
Tools and documentation to aid in modifying the ADI ADALM Pluto firmware

Pluto firmware modifications This repository contains tools and documentation to aid in modifying the ADI ADALM Pluto firmware. Extraction of the Plut

Daniel Estévez 28 Dec 21, 2022
Skykettle ha - Redmond SkyKettle integration for Home Assistant

Redmond SkyKettle integration for Home Assistant This integration allows to cont

Alexey 'Cluster' Avdyukhin 48 Jan 06, 2023
CPU benchmark by calculating Pi, powered by Python3

cpu-benchmark Info: CPU benchmark by calculating Pi, powered by Python 3. Algorithm The program calculates pi with an accuracy of 10,000 decimal place

Alex Dedyura 20 Jan 03, 2023
The ABR Control library is a python package for the control and path planning of robotic arms in real or simulated environments.

The ABR Control library is a python package for the control and path planning of robotic arms in real or simulated environments. ABR Control provides API's for the Mujoco, CoppeliaSim (formerly known

Applied Brain Research 277 Jan 05, 2023