Yanko Design

This 3D-Printed Macintosh Replica Is Actually a Voice AI Assistant

Smart speakers have become some of the most visually forgettable objects in modern homes. A cylinder, a puck, a fabric-wrapped drum, placed wherever the Wi-Fi is strong and largely invisible once the novelty wears off. They do their jobs well enough, but none of them look like they belong in a collection or on a desk that someone cares about. The hardware has always been purely functional, and the design has always shown it.

Alisher Ashimov approached the idea of a desk-based AI assistant from a completely different direction. Kira, his open-source project, takes its visual cues directly from the original 1984 Macintosh, a machine whose beige monolith silhouette is arguably the most iconic in personal computing history. The result is a voice-activated AI companion that looks more like a cherished collectible than a utility device.

Designer: Alisher Ashimov

The enclosure is 3D printed in a single recommended filament color: Light Khaki matte PLA, the closest approximation of that distinctive Apple beige. Rounded top corners, a recessed front panel, horizontal side vents, and a decorative floppy-drive-style slot below the display all reproduce the original’s proportions at pocket scale, somewhere around 80mm wide. A small four-color badge on the lower front panel adds the final recognizable touch.

Where the original Macintosh showed a desktop environment, Kira shows a face. The 1.5-inch OLED display renders two rectangular eyes and a small dash mouth, animating expressively in response to interaction. The wake word is “Hey, Kira,” and from there, a built-in microphone picks up questions while a 4Ω, 3W speaker delivers spoken answers through the sculpted housing. It handles everyday voice queries the same way any smart assistant does, just with considerably more personality sitting on the shelf.

The electronics are deliberately approachable. The core is a Seeed Studio XIAO ESP32-S3 Sense, a capable and compact microcontroller with built-in Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a microphone. The rest of the bill of materials, a speaker, amplifier, SH1107 OLED module, mini breadboard, and jumper wires, are available on Amazon for modest amounts. The 3D-printed enclosure is optimized to print in about three hours across two plates with minimal support material, and an assembly guide walks builders through wiring, assembly, and firmware flashing.

The software carries the same open-ended spirit as the hardware. Voice, language, the assistant’s character, and memory settings are all user-definable, which means Kira isn’t locked into a single personality or a single cloud service. Tinkerers can tune the firmware directly. Ashimov has published the files freely, with no commercial barriers between the design and anyone with a printer and an afternoon to spare.

The objects people choose to keep on their desks tend to say something about them. A tiny Macintosh-shaped AI assistant that you built yourself and tuned to your own preferences says rather a lot. It combines a piece of design history, a genuinely capable voice interface, and an honest invitation to understand exactly how the thing works, all in a form that most people will stop and ask about the moment they see it.

Exit mobile version