The Hottest Anti-AI Gadget Right Now? A Whimsical Homemade Cyberdeck
Forget sleek MacBooks and boring gray laptops. On TikTok, young women are going viral for building the most delightful rebellion against modern tech: custom “cyberdecks” stuffed inside purses, pink donut boxes, and mermaid-themed clamshells.
The breakout star is 22-year-old Londoner Annike Tan (known as Ube Boobey online). Her first creation — a glittering, pearl-covered “mermaid laptop” made from a vintage clamshell purse — exploded with over 32 million views. Complete with gold accents, fake moss, makeup tucked inside, and a custom gold-ring mouse, it’s equal parts fantasy and functional.
Inside? A Raspberry Pi, a small screen, and a keyboard. She’s loaded it with offline music, books, Wikipedia dumps, cat photos, and yes — it can even run Doom.
Tan’s message is loud and clear: “We should gatekeep cyberdecks from AI and megacorps.”
Originally inspired by William Gibson’s 1984 cyberpunk novel *Neuromancer*, cyberdecks were once the domain of bro-y hobbyists building rugged doomsday machines in Pelican cases. Now, a new wave — led largely by women — is giving the concept a hyper-femme, colorful, anti-minimalist makeover.
Other creators are jumping in:
- One made a “cyberduck” audio journal shaped like a cute bird.
- Another turned a tiny pink Dunkin’ Munchkin box into a working cyberdeck where you play as a barista serving lattes in a mini video game.
These aren’t meant to replace your phone. As Tan herself admits, she still uses her smartphone daily. But that’s not the point.
In an era where AI can write your emails, generate your art, and draft your wedding speeches, these homemade cyberdecks represent something refreshing: **personal expression, creativity, and actually making things with your own hands.**
They’re a joyful middle finger to mass-produced minimalism and the growing “AI-ification” of everything.
As Tan puts it: We’ve become so disconnected from how things are made. Building a cyberdeck is an entry point back into understanding technology — and making it your own.
Who else is suddenly tempted to turn their old handbag into a glittery offline computer?
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