There are also more pics in the "updates" section of the Kickstarter page. If I would have got one, it would have probably been the beige version for maximum nostalgia factor (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/505470364/the-x500-plus...). But I actually like detached keyboards that you can move around on the desk.
That was a cool project. I'm currently waiting for a freshly molded A500 case from an Indiegogo campaign that support a Raspberry Pi as well as an actual Amiga motherboard. I have a mechanical Amiga 500 keyboard waiting to go in the case when it arrives, and that came from another crowdfunded project. It's amazing how accessible this sort of manufacturing is these days compared to what we were doing ten years ago like this project.
I had an Amiga 500, I love the computer very much. The problem with these projects is that you end up with a keyboard at an angle that is not ergonomic at all.
Tried to do a similar thing with an old thinkpad (x250) a few months ago, basically just removing the screen so you have a computer, keyboard and trackpoint/trackpad in one. Turns out it wasn't just as easy as removing the screen, and I after a lot of messing around I only just managed to get it to boot, though the display ports didn't work and it kept beeping out error codes.
Hasn't that been a thing for a while? That's exactly what the raspberry pi 400 is. Also, isn't that what a laptop basically is, but with an attached screen?
Apple IIc, BBC Micro, C64, Sinclair ZX-81. Arguably even the Apple I.
So the oldest prior art is from about 1976-1977 and it's Apple's invention. Apple put through a new patent to protect against patent trolls.
If the PTO will (incorrectly!) accept a new patent for this very, very old invention then Apple is vulnerable to nuisance lawsuits from trolls so they'd rather be holding the new ridiculous patent themselves.
They do with this every new product they're even considering developing.
The beauty of Commodore 128D(CR) is astonishing. If only there were reproductions of this chassis and it was possible to cram modern (and rather beefy 7950X, so no dinky arm boards).
I do wonder why there aren't more retrocomputer raspberry pi project boxes. Would be cool to have an IBM 5100 on my desk.