Comment by ๐ stack
Re: "First post from my RGB30 Linux handheld console. Asโฆ"
I get it, but I do like the idea of an amazingly portable device but have an option to use the keyboard when it fits the task...
2025-12-17 ยท 5 months ago
5 Later Comments โ
๐ skyjake [OP...] ยท Dec 17 at 12:46:
Hmm, I suppose a cute little travel keyboard that connects via Bluetooth wouldn't be too bad to carry around. While you could jam the RGB30 in a pocket, it's not that comfortable, so some kind of a bag situation is needed anyway.
(I'm typing this via Bluetooth on the RGB30.)
Very nice. Is that screen keyboard part of Lagrange, or is it separate program?
๐ skyjake [OP...] ยท Jan 06 at 10:04:
It is part of Lagrange. The system can't show multiple programs at once due to there not being a window system present.
๐ donsta ยท Feb 21 at 15:39:
Amazing! How did you develop the application for this? I have a few of these, am a programmer, and am familiar with linux but don't know how I would get to the command line on one of these. I have a Powkiddy and two Anbernics.
๐ skyjake [OP...] ยท Feb 21 at 17:46:
@donsta The Powkiddy runs JELOS, which is basically a minimal aarch64 Linux distribution. I didn't bother looking for a cross-compilation toolchain, but instead chose an aarch64 Debian from the same time period (2023, I think) and ran it in a VM. In this Debian VM, I did a normal Lagrange build. I statically linked most dependencies, and thankfully the ones that had to be dynamic were compatible enough to work when they got loaded from JELOS instead of Debian. I also did a custom static build of SDL2 with support for the Rockchip GPU. All in all, a little hacky but it only took a few days to work out the kinks.
Original Post
First post from my RGB30 Linux handheld console. As suspected, typing on this new on-screen keyboard is tedious, but it works! I've got Lagrange running on this thing, obviously. :)