At 19:48 -0500 7/1/12, ARD wrote (more or less):
More seriously, can you name a present-day computer
where the
manufactuers do supply schematics, data on ASICs, and the like?
N8VEM.
Pretty sure that's not what you meant, though.
Seriously, I love the idea but see no good way to market it
to the average user.
Imbedded systems, "educational" systems, etc. could maybe
develop a market size that would make it possible to produce, but the
cost of providing good service info (much more to produce good
"educational" material to accompany the system if that's the route
you are going) ... ouch.
It looks to me like the market has fragmented into
a) N8VEM class systems -
*truly* niche market, open architecture but tiny numbers sold
b) Rpi class systems -
incomplete docs and SMI/unserviceable construction, moderate
numbers sold
c) Commodity boxes, iPad/ThinkBook/etc -
serviceable only with specialized tools or not at all, the
vast majority of the market.
d) Server boxes
more serviceable, but at the fast,
board-swap-to-get-it-running level. Expensive. Small fraction of
market.
Anyone have ideas on how to break out of those categories? I
think whatever it is will need a powerful enough CPU to run a *big*
fraction of modern hardware (recent Linux -> web browser +
self-hosted development environment?), be easy enough to assemble to
require minimal tool acquisition, and use commodity peripherals
(flash card storage, HDMI output, bluetooth or USB KB/mouse,
microphone?). Complexity is already an issue at that point; trying to
"educate" a new user across that whole array of components is pretty
daunting.
--
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