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polar8

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polar8
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Don't forget the original $33B was for the entire line, not just Merced to Bakersfield.
polar8
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I mean, Vietnam?
polar8
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Wouldn’t it just go back into groundwater?
polar8
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Cloud and AI infra already pull in $300B+ a year. Data center vacancy under 1% and they’re power utility constrained. The fiber guys built ahead of demand, these guys are printing money and can’t build new printers fast enough.
polar8
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The plow was a 10x productivity booster. Guess what happened next?
polar8
·tahun lalu·discuss
Can you provide more details on the health benefits of ethanol?
polar8
·tahun lalu·discuss
I’m European and live in a city. There are still plenty of drunk driving fatalities here.
polar8
·tahun lalu·discuss
After socialization comes drunk driving which alone kills a quarter million people annually.
polar8
·tahun lalu·discuss
“Perfectly fine” is a bit of a stretch. No amount of alcohol is good for health. WHO now say even small amounts increase risk of cancer and liver disease.
polar8
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Yes. Ideally, Kickstarter orders should be the tip of the iceberg for you. The number of people who will pledge real money for an in-development product on Kickstarter is a tiny subset of those who will buy it once it's available for next-day shipping on your website.
polar8
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Email me at [email protected] and I'll send you a coupon code!
polar8
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
That was the original design intent, since the 808 camera provided all the video recording functions I needed. I thought I would just buy a bunch of cameras and make some carrier boards for them. I was just out of college at the time, and my coworkers recognized my naivety. They suggested I contact the 808 manufacturer for a custom board spin, and that opened my eyes to the world of mass manufacturing in China. To make a long story short, I completely redesigned the product for scale [1] and that's the version I shipped to my backers.

In retrospect, the original version which I presented on Kickstarter would have been a miserable failure of a product. I was lucky to have backers who supported me and provided invaluable feedback through a few months of delays while I finished the redesign.

[1] http://www.rideye.com/
polar8
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Yes, all pledges were fulfilled and the product is now shipping through our website and retail channels.
polar8
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I've shipped one hardware product on Kickstarter [1] and I'm in the process of fulfilling the second [2]. Lessons I've learned are:

1. Design with your factory. Finding a good supplier is important but the real work starts once you've shaken hands. Your factory is your greatest resource as a presumably inexperienced hardware designer. It's like having an expert-level consultant work on your project for free, so take advantage of it.

2. Keep it extremely simple. MVP applies here. Your project will probably fail if it does not have the absolute minimum viable number of hardware features. The majority of your effort should be spent thinking about how to simplify your designs. Avoid moving parts if possible, and design parts that can be produced with simple tooling.

3. Your margins should be higher than you think. Think long and hard about your pricing before you launch your Kickstarter. Chances are, your MSRP is optimistically low. Bringing a hardware product to market involves lots of expensive rabbit holes. High margins will save you from death.

[1] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/rideye/rideye-the-black...

[2] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/voltus/voltus-mobile-po...