I don't believe those are mutually exclusive.
Talk him into opening it if the commercialization fails.
@Uri Shaked Regarding the up comming HADU Pico course, is there something you wish to see/would happen during the course. What would make you happy.
Any advice on making money from open source hardware?
Or find someone to fund it as open source for him
As I see it, making LOTS of money is a skill, which is pretty much orthogonal to being a great developer, creating amazing projects or anything similar.
opensource is awesome but it is a challenge
I don't sell any open source things, yet, but have two projects I'd love to be open if I can figure out a way to
@Dave Blundell I'd start with interviewing Limor from Adafruit and Nate from Sparkfun
I agree, but he is rather stubborn and wants to change all computing - "his way". I love him, but he can be hard to love. Yeah, i offered to help him raise the money. He just wants to do it his way, and probably does not want his older brother to help him.
Older brothers can be .... at times.
B^)
I have some and are one!
I can only talk about The Skull, which made something like $1,500, which I don't think it's a LOTS of money
@Inne I'd love to see creative things people do with what they're learning.
No, but do that same thing enough times and you can make it something big
@Uri, so a 0.02 percent of ROI?
B^)
I downloaded Wikipedia the last two days. When I was working on Google ngrams, I had a problem that was taking my program 32 hours to run. He memory mapped and optimized and it ran in three minutes. I beg him to let me use that to solve some Internet global problems, but he has some other things in mind. He is thinking about my Wikipedia problem.
For instance, in the AVR course, people had an assignment to build a pong game in AVR assembly, from scratch.
It was fun to see how everyone approached this differently, and some people even went the extra mile and added some fun features like a speaker
@Dan Maloney as Derek Sivers once said, you never know where the lottery tickets are.
Pong? Whoa! I feel that could easily get over my head!
I always thought the way they added "English" to the paddle in hardware with the original Pong was a pretty cool hack.
@Dan, so there was "English" involved?
No wonder I was so bad at it!
B^)
@Uri Shaked How about "Find all the covid mentions on the Internet (about 8 billion), identify the owners, contact them, classify the use and purpose, enroll the people in a global cooperative effort. Copy the problem to more computers, keep going till you find everyone and get them working together =--- simple algorithm, hard to get enough computer resources to do. And human buying in and agreement.
@Michael Möller pong, I really love the logs he's written along the way:
Here'shttps://hackaday.io/project/177916-avr-asm-exam
AVR Asm Exam
I attended the AVR assembly course, and it has a Final Project or Examination. This is my submission thereto. Well, it is more than that, it is also my trials and errors on getting there. While the main purpose is to present a software implementation on the wokwi.com simulator, this project will also run on real hardware.
Thanks for the mention.
@Dan Maloney reference please?
@Uri Shaked and @Michael Möller Thanks!
I'll have to look that up -- think I mentioned it in a story I did when the dude who wrote pong passed away...
@Michael Möller , send me your address later, I'll send you a Skull to keep your brain busy :)
p.s.Ted Dabney, that was his name
https://hackaday.com/2018/06/05/ted-dabney-atari-and-the-video-game-revolution/
Ted Dabney, Atari, And The Video Game Revolution
It may be hard for those raised on cinematic video games to conceive of the wonder of watching a plain white dot tracing across a black screen, reflecting off walls and bounced by a little paddle that responded instantly to the twist of a wrist.
Looks like I didn't include that nugget. Think it was something I stumbled upon while I was researching. I'll see if I can find my notes
Google doesn't really help here
Do you mean this little nugget?
"and bounced by a little paddle that responded instantly to the twist of a wrist."
I got hold of some TTL logic diagrams to build it myself ... in those times .. TTL too expensive. And the TV modulator was "black box"
Now, there was some specific set of gates that they added to make it take more skill to play -- the angle of reflection would change a bit depending on which part of the paddle you hit the ball with. It was pretty cool stuff.
And now people are building AVR pong in assembly in matter of days
all these spoiled assembly programmers
Oops, look at that -- we're past the top of the hour. Uri, thanks for being on today, this was great - I knew it would be a rambling Hack Chat, but didn't expect molecular evolution and Pong in addition to AVR and RP2040! Great stuff, thanks so much for stopping by!
yes, Thanks to all!
Thanks.
Thanks!
Likewise !
Thanks
👋
Thanks Uri
And thanks to everyone for the fun questions and great discussion. We're taking next week off, but be sure to check in again on May 5 when we get back together again.
Thanks as well!
'till the next time!
Thx Dan
Thank you all!
Looking forward to your next HaDU course, too. Good luck with that!
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