This article is very confusing in the way it refers to "early backers", I think it's leaving people with the wrong impression of what is shipping. They are shipping "alpha" CHIP computers only to the 150 people who backed at the "KERNEL HACKERS" tier for $150+S/H [1]. They've also announced that they'll be shipping an unexpected second alpha unit to each of those 150 backers again next month, partly because the first batch won't have any boot images programmed.
This initial shipment of 150 was scheduled for September from the beginning of the kickstarter, but it's not until December that the "$9" tiers begin to ship, and not until May 2016 that the majority of their rewards are due. It's nice to see them more or less on schedule with the roadmap in the original kickstarter, but this isn't anything unexpected.
There are people who say the $9 price point is unrealistic, and that the company will have to start taking additional "preorders" at higher prices just to afford to manufacture the preorders they already have, or that it's relying on corporate partnerships and funding to sell at a loss until enough interest is built up that they can increase the price. This is a fairly small shipment, which probably won't change any minds on that subject.
There are people who say the $9 price point is unrealistic, and that the company will have to start taking additional "preorders" at higher prices just to afford to manufacture the preorders they already have, or that it's relying on corporate partnerships and funding to sell at a loss until enough interest is built up that they can increase the price. This is a fairly small shipment, which probably won't change any minds on that subject.
$9 is substantially less than the BOM cost, even assuming huge quantity discounts. A small American startup does not have access to some secret source of ultra-cheap components. The price is marketing spin, nothing more.
I remember when I tried to order it, the shipping itself was 20$, and there was no way to order more than one. I often order stuff way larger than that, that come to way less than 20$, all in, from China. I'm pretty sure that's part of their margin.
The OrangePi omits the on-board flash and the wireless chipset, which represent a substantial proportion of the CHIP's BOM cost. The HDMI and Ethernet jacks add less than $1 to the OrangePi's BOM cost. The OrangePi team are based in Shenzhen, which is a big deal when you're trying to squeeze your suppliers.
The $6 difference in price is highly significant - a 66% increase is far from trivial. I can see how the OrangePi can be made at a small profit, assuming they're getting a decent price on the Allwinner H3 SoC. The CHIP simply doesn't add up at $9, even as a breakeven proposition.
Ethernet jacks are actually surprisingly expensive - I'm guessing due to some combination of the integrated transformer and the difficulty of manufacturing the connector - so the BOM cost could well be more than adding a wireless chip these days.
Apparently that's an Orange Pi Plus. The 'normal' one [1] lacks the SATA interface and has one fewer USB 2.0 Port, but otherwise seems pretty much the same.
The price the manufacturer is looking to sell, this doesn't make sense. Sure it offers more hardware flexibility than a PI, but its ultimate form factor makes it at best a pi type substitute rather than opening up new possibilities like what the Arduino Nano does.
It will by interesting to see what comes from this, I think it's really interesting how far things have come... once we see python and node running on this, there will be some significant proliferation of projects that can target it.
Hopefully direct sales orders are coming soon, I missed the boat on this... then again, I've given away a couple of Raspberry Pis over the years mainly because I never got around to doing anything with them.
I'm glad to hear this, I have a pile of pi's and I haven't used them (plenty of ideas, no time). I was feeling really guilty..glad I'm not the only one.
I'll gladly pay for shipping and handling and as much as I can to take one of those off your hands if you have no use for it. I desperately need one, but I honestly don't have the funds to actually purchase one.
No, a company that makes competing single-board computers claimed that Chip will have to go up in price to $39 after the Kickstarter. The actual manufacturer never said it's going up in price, and I doubt it'll cost anywhere near that much because it wouldn't be competitive. The higher-end Orange Pi PC is currently selling for $15 with a quad-core processor, 1GB of RAM, 4K video decode in hardware, and Ethernet and HDMI out: http://hackaday.com/2015/09/05/orange-is-the-new-15-pi/ (No onboard WiFi or Bluetooth on that, but there's plenty of free USB ports to plug an adapter into.)
I had a professor who liked to say things like "RAM is free" when talking about how the cost of computers has come down over the course of his life. I always rolled my eyes and thought yeah, it's basically free when you're an accomplished academic who brings in untold amounts of grant money and makes even more from consulting than you do from your university salary. But to a broke college student, anything that costs more than a few hours of minimum wage =/= free.
I really like this concept of cheap, all-in-one computers. We've had Arduinos and Raspberry Pis, but stuff like this really opens a lot of doors. $40 is a great price for a computer, but I would never consider using it for a project where its destruction is a legitimate risk (anything exposed to the elements, or liquid, or drones, for example), but with a $9 computer I would.
I think you grossly misunderstood him. He's just saying that it's many orders of magnitude cheaper (more available) than in his days, if you go back a few decades you had to do serious bit wrangling in almost every application to get things to fit in memory, while those days no one cares your app uses 1kb more or less of RAM; he's probably not talking about how much specific RAM cards cost on your PC, or how much those dev boards cost.
On a side note, if you compare how much you pay for your college, directly or indirectly (including housing, books, food), $40 for an educational kit that you spend many hours on is almost free.
I understood him perfectly, and he had plenty of stories about limited resources back in the old days. One of my favorites was about the time he rewrote a routine his boss had implemented so it ran in O(log n) instead of O(n^2), only to be fired by his boss for one-upping him and then rehired by his boss's boss the next day. Overall his class was a great experience.
I just think that, especially when it comes to money, there's a disconnect between Fermi estimates and reality.
On one hand, I can sort of agree with your prof. I learned coding on a system that had 16 kB total memory. The laptop I'm using now has 16 GB RAM and 250 GB storage.
On the other hand, when I'm eyeballing a new environment I'm building in the cloud, one of the first things I'm asking myself is - how much total RAM? (because that's one major driver of cost)
Definitely all in the perspective, though of course the premium paid for more RAM does not necessarily represent an accurate extra cost incurred by the provider. Amount of available RAM is very often pretty far disconnected from the cost to provide the good or service and is just acting as a price tiering mechanism.
This is true for cloud services as well as other things like cell phones (eg. the 2*X GB version is often significantly more expensive than the X GB version, way more than the cost of the extra memory alone would warrant if you just considered the cost of the chips).
A multi user system that I bought in the mid 80's held a max of 4mb of memory and a max of 144mb hard drive. I think the memory was something like $4000 (in 80's dollars, that's close to $9000 today) for 2mb of memory. So that was just the cost of the memory. On that system by the way you could hook up 26 Wyse terminals. We had maybe 12 terminals hooked up with 2mb of memory and a 72mb hard drive. No graphics everything was pretty system. It ran accounting and job scheduling systems (some of which I actually wrote myself as a non-programmer). At the time I think dinner for two was about $35 for a nice place. Healthcare was $65 per month for the best possible plan. IIM I was a few years out of college at the time.
ESP8266 is where the excitement is now. You can buy three ESP-12's on Aliexpress for the price of a CHIP and get free shipping to boot. No Linux, but you can program it now with the Arduino IDE. FCC approved 802.11 b/g/n built-in, SPI, UART, a few GPIOs, faster and more RAM / FLASH than Arduino, etc.
I'm not sure about that. If it's a stationary, long-term thing, just tap the main power conduit on whatever device you're hacking.
If it's mobile or short-term, Li-Ion cells are pretty awesome. For a few bucks, you could buy a Li-Ion cell, and a smart charger that will switch the load between battery and main power depending on voltage levels.
I'm surprised there isn't more use of Power-over-Ethernet or similar concepts in projects. Ethernet doesn't need complicated configuration or crypto for basic security. It's not a good choice for general consumer products (how many people have cat6 running through their house?) but I imagine that won't slow down people assembling IoT projects.
PoE is on one hand (relatively, for ~$10 devices) expensive to do, with all the signaling and filtering needed, while on the other hand, not abundant in the environments where these projects are run.
I do have an 8-port-1Gb/s-switch with 4-PoE ports at home. It cost 5 times as much as the "plain" 8-port-1Gb/s with no PoE, and I'm the only person I know who has one at home.
Oh definitely. "Real" PoE is expensive and unhelpful but it doesn't have to be standard PoE. You can just steal some pairs from cat5 and still get some form of ethernet. There are even cheap splitters/injectors out there. You won't get the nifty auto-negotiation, filtering, or anything else but it'll work.
When you start comparing costs, RAM is extraordinarily cheap. Under $10CAD/GB. I do contract work primarily, and hardware that saves time (e.g. by reducing the time for compile cycles) pays for itself very very quickly. I have a client who likes to have me work on-site and has development machines with only 4GB of RAM. Last year, we were doing builds that took minutes on my personal beefy machine, and an hour or two on theirs. The extra RAM would have paid for itself the first day it showed up, and would have paid a dividend every following day...
Agreed in full. My development desktop, a repurposed Westmere PowerEdge tower, has 96GB of RAM in it. The value I realize from being able to load everything I care about, ever into RAM significantly outstrips a faster CPU (not that 16 logical cores at 2.8GHz is holding me up or anything). Turns out that ramdisks are super fast--who'd have thought?
Good to see likeminded people here on that subject. I used to push RAM drives, etc in late 90's to early 2000's for critical stuff. People said it was crazy but performance and security benefits were great. Being re-discovered in past 5 years or so in cloud industry in form of "RAM sleds," etc. As if RAM making stuff faster was a new thing. ;)
Another benefit of tons of RAM is in special-purpose systems using memory-safe runtime and GC. The copying GC's were relatively simple to implement for me a while ago. When RAM expanded, I had one design that just used it for GC instead of more storage. Lots of space not utilized in normal case but imagine a whole app/service GC'd while running on tiny kernel w/ good exception handling. Never crashed. Imagine a desktop where similarly all the system services were memory safe and GC'd with a dedicated piece of hardware doing pauseless, concurrent GC. So, a crashless, fast desktop with critical stuff stored in RAM. I'll take it.
Note: Oberon Systems (eg A2 Bluebottle) use a GC language and run very fast. That with modern features, HW acceleration, and user-mode drivers.
Holy crap. Just checked ebay. I didn't realize how cheaply you could get ridiculous equipment like that. There's an older PowerEdge with 48GB of RAM for around $600. Hmmm... the credit card is feeling warm in my pocket...
"But to a broke college student, anything that costs more than a few hours of minimum wage =/= free."
With all due respect to a college student today there are so many things you can do to make money that your professor couldn't do back in his day. It doesn't even come close. And back in his day (if it's the same as my day) if you hustled (which I did for example) you never ever earned minimum wage. I did (as I am sure many people did) many things on the side in order to make money. And that was back when I have to say it was a bit more difficult than it is now.
Somewhere in a Terry Pratchett book he opines that the best thing governments can do is build libraries and schools and leave the doors open. I think that we are at or very near the point where you could similarly write "just fly over countries, parachuting down single board computers and solar cells"
Don't forget Wi-Fi dongles! Otherwise you're just parachuting down a bunch of libraries without books.
I'm not sure whether Elon Musk is trying to take over the world with his "free satellite internet for everyone" plan, but if that network ever comes online, it could be a game-changer for people in developing countries. Too bad it probably won't be compatible with regular Wi-Fi.
Wow, I had not heard about this before. For the price and spec that can't be beat. I would've expected the maker scene to blow up over this but I haven't heard anything. I have a ton of projects that could leverage this. How did they make this so cheap?
My understanding after talking with Rauchwerk today is that the boards are shipping out on the timeline they've outlined on the kickstater page. The only divergence from that schedule is that Kernel Hacker Backers will get their first board in 5-9 days and their second -- which is a bonus board -- in mid-October.
Yeah, I added one of the add-ons for a video adapter, so I think my order will be shipped much later. But, I'm excited to play with it, and see what other people can do with it.
This initial shipment of 150 was scheduled for September from the beginning of the kickstarter, but it's not until December that the "$9" tiers begin to ship, and not until May 2016 that the majority of their rewards are due. It's nice to see them more or less on schedule with the roadmap in the original kickstarter, but this isn't anything unexpected.
There are people who say the $9 price point is unrealistic, and that the company will have to start taking additional "preorders" at higher prices just to afford to manufacture the preorders they already have, or that it's relying on corporate partnerships and funding to sell at a loss until enough interest is built up that they can increase the price. This is a fairly small shipment, which probably won't change any minds on that subject.
[1] https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1598272670/chip-the-wor...