Huie
Member
Registered: Nov 1999
Location:
Posts: 10 |
Re: This is a good idea
quote: Originally posted by MPM
(edited for brevity)
1) Flash is hard to get these days.
2) The only current benefit from this type of upgrade is having some Flash available for 3rd-party software storage like Palm users have now.
3) As pointed out, there would still be no way to upgrade the OS on a Visor that has had this Flash upgrade.
4) It would void your warrantee. Not to important to some people, but very important to others.
5) Cost.
6) Even if you could do such an upgrade for $100. Why not just sell your Visor Deluxe on eBay for about $175 to $200 (I just checked these prices) and then pay $100-$125 more to get a Platinum. For the same price you get Palm OS 3.5.2 and a faster processor. (Yeah, I know - still no Flash).
Okay, let me go through this all at once- yes flash is hard to get nowadays, especially for a little guy. But do you think it's much more than the $10/2M that you'd get it at if you were to buy an 8M springboard backup module for full retail?
Let me just make up some more numbers- if you really want to get gouged on memory prices, most laptop memory modules (SODIMMs) use the proper EDO DRAM. Egghead has these for about $50/64M or $8.25/8M RETAIL. Assume that you're going to pay twice that just for the individual components. Call it about $30 to get a four layer printed circuit board, another $5 for miscellaneous parts (connector, capacitors, jumpers), $20 assembly. Yeah they're exhorborant prices, but possibly reasonable to assume if you're thinking a prototype run off less than 100 boards. Call it about $90 per unit. Then double it for a 50% margin and yes, it is pricy.
Now cost cut this all- get the PCBs made in China for about $5-$10 if not less. Assume you can get the individual memory chips for their assembled reatil price. Use a domestic assembly house so you can oversee it, maybe bargain them down to $15 (not including NRE like the solder paste screen). And you've got a retail price of just the hardware at about $100. Assume your software is priced like the TRG FlashPro and add another few bucks to amortize your development costs and you can hit the $150 price point. (isn't it funny how I've pretty much matched the TRG prices for both its SuperPilot II XL and xtra xtra Pro boards? 
With a little more effort, maybe you could pull your cost down to what TRG has their xtra xtra Pro board now selling for: $99.
So, cost might be an issue if you stay too small, but if you can reach certain volumes, you can make it cheap enough. Yeah, I know, it's a "chicken and the egg" issue, but TRG sucessfully solved it when the overall handheld market was much smaller.
Yes, that only gives you flash and the ability to add programs (and backup data), not necessarily OS upgrades.
Would it really be in HS or Palm's best interest to support/allow/lisence an upgrade? For Handspring, it would allow them to increase their marketshare. They're already pushing their expandability via the Springboard slot. With this they could push their OS expandability without increasing the price of the units. Yes, they claim that they support upgrades to the OS via patches and the Springboard slot (http://www.handspring.com/products/...tml#upgradingA1)- these could also just be put into the flash.
Yes, though they havent really provided any significant upgrade patches to the OS, but there's only so much that you can do with patches. For instance, a lot of the graphics routines have changed with OSv3.5- it's not something that can easily be done with a patch. Not to mention it'd probably take up a lot of RAM.
Admittedly, people would scream if HS helped make a flash OS upgrade when they don't even have flash, but they could counter that if they did make it work on a springboard unit too, especially if the internal flash upgrade did cost more (say, something like $20 
But you still could add the one existing patch (in addition to other apps) to the flash.
I find it interesting that Handspring sells a stylus with a screwdriver in it, and even supplies it with the Prism and Platinum, when there is no reason to open up the things. Would using the supplied screwdriver to take apart the Visor and change a board really void the warranty? Yes, there are people who would not want to void their warranty, but the people who would like to add a card and don't care about voiding their warranty have probably already taken the things apart.
Yes, you could just sell your Visor and buy a new one, but there is a definate action potential there that doesn't come from buying an upgrade card. You have to invest more time, money, and effort in upgrading from one Visor to another Palm device, possibly a Visor, psooibly not, depending on your current investment in cradles, springboard modules, styli, cases, etc.
quote:
Back to normal mode...
If someone would offer this upgrade for $80 as described above, I would do it. At $100, I'd think about it and probably do it. Add in an upgrade to Palm OS 3.3 or 3.5.2 and YEAH! I 'd pay $150 for that!
So, would you pay $150 for the thing knowing that you might need to pay another $20 to upgrade the OS in the future?
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