A Maker Built a $200 Writing-Only Device Because He Couldn’t Sleep

Writing on a laptop or phone is convenient, but it rarely stays that way. Notifications, browser tabs, and social media feeds have turned the most basic tasks into exercises in self-discipline. Writers, journalists, and anyone who just needs to put thoughts to paper have been searching for a better solution, and a growing community around dedicated, distraction-free writing devices called writerdecks has quietly been gaining momentum.

The Bee Write Back is one of the more charming entries in that space. Built by a maker named “shmimel”, the device grew out of a deeply personal need: he was having trouble sleeping and found that journaling helped, but couldn’t quite commit to a handwritten journal. So he did what any tinkerer would do and built his own dedicated writing machine from scratch.

Designer: Simon Shimel

The result is compact and immediately recognizable. Its 3D-printed enclosure comes in two tones: a bright yellow base that houses the electronics, and a matte black screen cover adorned with bee emblems. The whole thing has a hand-built charm that no mass-produced gadget can replicate, and it’s the kind of device that tends to make people stop and ask, “wait, what is that?”

At the heart of the typing experience is a YMDK Air40 keyboard PCB loaded with 47 hot-swappable mechanical switches and matching keycaps. For anyone who’s spent years on laptop chiclet keys or membrane keyboards, the tactile feedback of a proper mechanical switch changes everything. The satisfying click or thump of each keystroke becomes almost meditative, which is exactly what you want when words need to keep flowing.

The display is a 5.5-inch AMOLED panel at 1280 x 720 resolution, vivid enough for comfortable reading without the eye strain of a typical laptop screen. Powering it all is a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W, with a quad-core Cortex-A53 chip, 512 MB of RAM, and built-in Wi-Fi. A Seengreat UPS Hat with an 18650 battery keeps everything running away from any wall outlet.

Boot it up, and you’re in Raspberry Pi OS Lite, a stripped-down Linux environment that loads fast and stays focused. There are no app stores, no notification bubbles, and no algorithms fighting for your attention. It’s the kind of thing you pull out before bed to journal, bring to a coffee shop to draft, or pack on a trip when you need a writing-only companion.

The creator made the entire project open source, with build files and a detailed assembly guide available on GitHub. The total material cost comes to roughly $200, excluding 3D printing costs. That puts it roughly in line with some off-the-shelf writing gadgets, but with the added satisfaction of building it yourself and the freedom to swap out parts, tweak the layout, or change the enclosure color entirely.

What makes the Bee Write Back worth paying attention to is less about its specs and more about what it deliberately leaves out. Most devices pack in as many features as possible, but shmimel’s creation goes the other direction: pare things down until only the writing remains. For anyone looking to reclaim the quiet, focused experience of putting words down without fighting their tools, that restraint speaks for itself.