[Coco] Re: [Color Computer] Is this a discussion about a new Coco?
James Diffendaffer
jdiffendaffer at yahoo.com
Mon Apr 18 18:45:02 EDT 2005
--- In ColorComputer at yahoogroups.com, Mark Marlette <mark at c...> wrote:
> At 10:36 AM 4/18/2005, you wrote:
> that includes all of the options, including the Ethernet. The
Ethernet chip
> alone costs well over $65 and that doesn't include the support
chips. Then
Oh please... $65? What chip are you using? There are pleanty of
controller chips for under $15 in single quantity... not my fault if
you chose an expensive one. Geeze... a Coldfire CPU with built in
ethernet, USB and PCI is less than $40 in small quantity! I could
build a board based on a coldfire and a couple PCI chips, a PLD and
emulate the $%#& thing cheaper and faster.
If you integrate everything onto a larger PLD you can do everything
that was posted with that list for under $100 cost. Cost is what I
was talking about. The reduced cost of the board + chips will make up
for the large PLD. Most of the parts on that list for the Superboard
are on the Open Cores site!
Cloud-9 is charging over $100 for an IDE board! IDE!!!! And we're not
talking about UDMA here either. All that requires is to adjust some
buss logic and decode the address! It requires around 4 TTL chips (if
you don't overdesign the thing) for under $10 at Radio Shack!
I did a price check on getting an IDE/USB board printed. It was under
$17 each in quantity 20 and that was the first quote with solder mask.
If I were to order 100, drop solder mask and shop around it's
probably under $10. The chips + connectors are under $20 in quantity 1.
> add in the cost of the PCB board, CPLDs which are in the $8-11 range
each
> which there are 4-6 of them on the board. As you can see without
evening
> spending a whole a lot of time on it that the price goes up very
fast. You
> must have been a sleep that day in Business Economics. Prove me
wrong and
> send me the product. You can't.
You must have been asleep in Business Economics. There isn't enough
of a CoCo market to waste building a business on. It's not like they
are making new CoCo's. Your trying to turn a hobby into a business...
which is ok but don't claim it's more than it is.
> It is easier for you to sit back and do
> nothing but critique other peoples work and say it is too expensive.
>
> I can tell by your previous posts that you have done VERY little with
> developing products.
I used to own a company that built hardware for the Amiga, some of
which I designed, I know what I'm talking about. We were selling more
hardware in a week that Cloud-9 has sold since it was started.
A.I.R. sold over $750,000 worth of product (1 product) in the first 6
months and it took us over half of that time just to build up
manufacturing ability and a dealer network. At the time I sold out we
were doing about $90,000 per month and had 4(?) products.
BTW, we were paying under $2/board on a circuit board about half the
size this IDE/USB board would be.
> You want to use discrete components rather than
> current technology. As that is you choice, I have DONE both and this
is a
You want to use PLDs so people can't copy your design. I want to
design something someone can download the design, print their own
circuit board and use off the shelf parts on. Totally different goal.
If I wanted to make my life easier I'd use the PLD and forget having
to worry about how to fit all the parts in such a small space.
For something like the Superboard I'd use a larger PLD instead of
multiple small PLDs since it will be smaller for about the same price.
> I have fifty-seven down payments for the SuperBoard with many follow on
> orders.
WOW! 57!!!! That's smaller than what A.I.R.'s first order was (200)
and the next week it was twice that. Within 2 months we had to hire
people to assemble our stuff.
> I'm not taking anymore down payments as the initial price to
> produce has been met. Maybe you have more business sense than I do
or just
> have more money to throw around? Can you put out over $5700 to
produce this
> ONE board? Remember we produce more than this one board. I'll do the
math
> for you.... 57 * $100(your price) = $5700. I used $100, even though
it is
> more expensive than that. You would go broke because you will loose
money
> on every board sold. This is a hobby business for me, love and
passion of
I was talking cost. Distributor markup should be at least 50%, dealer
markup should be at least 75% and direct sales should be 100%.
> the machine. I can't afford to make those types of errors and be around
> here very long.
And is this business you've been running as a hobby paying your bills?
Do you have another job?
> We have been around and will continue to be around because
> of the thought and planning that goes in to each and every product
we produce.
Marketing BS. If you had to live off of Cloud-9 you'd starve and if
you died would the company be around to take care of your customers
tomorrow?
> With the given facts, you are WAY off base on your price and statement.
According to you... a guy that will spend $65 on an ethernet
controller and who sells an IDE board for $100.
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