--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 3:25 AM, chadvellacott@sasktel.net wrote:
(Quotes below, might have minor changes, and might have additions
enclosed by {}, and ~ for omissions.)
On 16.9.7 20:20, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote:
On ~, Sep 8, 2016 at 3:13 AM, chadvellacott@sasktel.net wrote:
But from a private reply from Luke (quoted next below), I guess that
we have SOME more time.
hiya chad, welcome to the list.
ok, so i've learned that crowdsupply is taking preorders from the end date of the campaign, for a second batch which will be after the first one is delivered. exact dates TBD, i'll need to see how things go.
But am I right to understand, that you pay the factory(s) at the same time, and each factory produces it's things as one batch?
produces it is things.... no it doesn't "produce it is things" - that doesn't make any sense. it might produce *its* things...
and each factory produces its things as one batch?
ah, now we're using the relative pronoun "its", instead of the contraction of the two words "it" and "is" with an apostrophe, the sentence makes sense.
yes, the factory produces its things in one batch: the setup and teardown costs (equipment, wasted materials) are pretty much the same no matter how many "things" are made. so if you want one "thing" made, it will cost you.... $USD 1,200. if you want *five* "things" made, it will cost you $1700 (around $340 each). but if you want a *thousand* made, they're $30 each.
... exactly the same "thing", exactly the same factory... exactly the same cost to set up, exactly the same cost to clean up afterwards.
so the more you can get made at once, the less they cost. very simple.
the extreme case is here, very very funny ted talk, by the man who lived as a goat: http://www.geek.com/geek-pick/nine-month-project-to-build-a-toaster-from-scr...
l.