On 8/21/2021 at 1:31 PM, The 8-Bit Guy said:
So, I'm just going to answer a few more concerns about the X8... I made that clear at the beginning. I wanted to release it 6 months ago.
@The 8-Bit Guy, this was a good instinct.
On 8/21/2021 at 1:31 PM, The 8-Bit Guy said:
Several people seemed concerned about how much money I was going to make from this project and how the X8 might reduce that... This project was NEVER about money for me... My main goal was to have my dream computer, and that other people would have it too.
It is amazing anyone thinks this is their business, or that you are somehow incapable of managing your own finances. That being said, it is shocking how much money has been spent before having a solid prototype. There seems to have been a lot of putting the cart before the horse. For example, I never understood the rush to release a logo'd keyboard.
On 8/21/2021 at 1:31 PM, The 8-Bit Guy said:
I suppose I could find some time next week to port Petscii Robots to the X8 for demonstration
You did write that it should only take an hour or two. Seems like a cheap investment if you care about X8 sceptics taking you seriously.
On 8/21/2021 at 1:31 PM, The 8-Bit Guy said:
The X16 has taken much longer to bring to market that I thought. There were many times where development was halted for 6 months or more because of unsolvable bugs. And even though we are close to being able to release a kit fo the X16..
Here we get to the root of the problem. Except for Frank, your team does not have the digital design experience to execute this project, at least not in a timely fashion. There is no shame in this, nobody emerges from the womb an electronics expert. Without experience the only path is to learn while doing. This will always take longer, and starting down dead-end paths is inevitable. But there has been this constant drum-beat to lock down the design and build something, NOW! I'm sorry, speed, quality and learning on the run are incompatible. Your choices are build junk, go slow, or seek experienced guidance.
From the outside looking in, X16p appears not close to production ready. The expansion bus, arguably its main feature, is just not good. You have already told of other non-working areas that need firmware updates. Speaking of which, how did you end up in a place where only one person in the world can do a firmware update? That's just not OK for a project that wants to be serious. After 35 years of designing digital systems I think I am a decent judge of projects and talent. The project was stalled for ~6 months by about the simplest possible design bug. How many marginal bugs are waiting for quantity production to show up? You are in worse shape than you think.
On 8/21/2021 at 1:31 PM, The 8-Bit Guy said:
I do not believe X8 sales will cannibalize X16p sales.
So what if it does?
I'll make this brief, unlike some commenters here. I do engineering, not marketing.
There have been many ridiculous comments here, kneecap X8 to prevent competition, don't fragment the ecosystem, yadda yadda yadda. None of this crap matters.
Let's be real, this is not the next dominant computing platform. This project is a toy targeted at a niche audience. That's not meant to be pejorative. I love toys. Watching the development from afar has been enjoyable. You did this for fun and education, not to put a roof over your head and feed your family. How did you end up with 1000 case minimum orders and 50% down on gawd knows how many keyboards?
X8 sounds like a fun project that meets most of the goals you laid out in the first half of video #1. If you like it, release it. You don't owe the discussion forum armchair quarterbacks anything.
I closing I will make one final pitch against the Cloanto deal. It's pointless, the only good reason to license firmware is for backwards compatibility. This was a bad decision, one of the few cases where your instincts let you down.
If you don't own your firmware you don't really control your project. Is a small convenience worth having this millstone around your neck forever? I hope you reconsider.
Best regards and I sincerely hope for your project's success.