SparkFun has 24 in stock as of a few minutes ago 6/12/2014

On Sunday, April 13, 2014 7:07:00 PM UTC-4, Jason Kridner wrote:
>
> Just about to post this to http://beagleboard.org/blog, but it 
> wouldn't hurt to get a bit of community feedback before pushing this 
> out there.... 
>
> Dude, where's my BeagleBone Black? I hear that question a LOT. No, we 
> weren't sleeping, but sometimes it takes a minute for a plan to come 
> together. And don't you love it when a plan comes together? 
>
> Your BeagleBone Black is on the way and below are the whys and hows. 
>
> Buying a BeagleBone Black back around October last year was easy---and 
> then suddenly they were gone. Having a big launch and then slowing 
> down to a more steady pace of production is what is normally expected. 
> Demand was strong, but distributors were showing a small amount of 
> stock and people were getting their boards on demand. Based on the 
> status, distributors had requested CircuitCo (the Richardson, Texas 
> based manufacturer of all official BeagleBoard.org boards) to provide 
> boards at a certain pace, and production dropped from about 6,000 a 
> week at launch to around 3,000 a week. 
>
> Then came Radio Shack, filling their stores with Make's Getting 
> Started with BeagleBone kit. Then the Christmas rush. Then the Georgia 
> Tech massively open online course on control of mobile robots hosted 
> on Coursera. We had a couple of small production boosts, but haven't 
> been able to make any dent in the demand. Everyone is starting to find 
> out what BeagleBone Black can do, using it in their classes, hobbies, 
> prototypes---and products. 
>
> When it comes to those people using a BeagleBone Black in an end 
> product, well, the BeagleBoard.org terms and conditions clearly say we 
> aren't responsible for the quality in those cases. Nevertheless, the 
> quality speaks for itself and many people are choosing to simply drop 
> them into things beyond just a few prototype units. In practice, we'll 
> never know unless you try to return a bunch of boards at once for 
> repairs. Our desire is that people using the boards in products work 
> directly with a contract manufacturer or distributor to enable boards 
> builds to be planned out in time and with terms and conditions that 
> won't hurt BeagleBoard.org's ability to supply classrooms, hobbyists 
> and professionals building prototypes. Still, if distributors show 
> stock, I expect people building products to continue to chew up some 
> of the board supply. 
>
> While these people building products are certainly sucking up a lot of 
> boards, it is clear they aren't the only source of the high demand. 
> Some of our distribution partners, most notably Adafruit and Special 
> Computing, put quantity limits of one board per customer on their 
> orders to help keep supply going to individual makers. I took a look 
> at Adafruit's website while they were showing some sock and observed 
> board disappearing at the rate of about 2-3 PER MINUTE. One tweet from 
> me and they were sold out again. 
>
> This all leads to the obvious conclusion: we need more capacity. To 
> accomplish this, we are taking a multiple prong approach of increasing 
> capacity at CircuitCo as well as bringing on an additional 
> manufacturer. These two prongs are summarized below. 
>
> Prong #1 - Ramping up production at CircuitCo 
>
> Ramping up production costs money. More test equipment is needed. 
> Orders on various parts must be accelerated. Additional staff must be 
> hired to run additional shifts. CircuitCo has been fantastic at taking 
> the risk for us, but the margins for BeagleBone Black aren't the 
> friendliest for them to take on these additional costs. At initial 
> launch, it is a benefit for them to get exposed to more customers for 
> their core business, complex circuit assembly and engineering 
> services, but shipping more of the exact same board isn't going to 
> give them a lot more exposure. 
>
> We're really close to shifting the distribution shipped on our boards 
> from Angstrom Distribution to Debian. Feedback from different people, 
> especially Adafruit, tells us this will improve usability in the 
> largest segments of our community. Angstrom Distribution is much more 
> customizable and is very friendly to professional developers looking 
> to tweak the most out of the system, but for many novices it 
> introduces a barrier to learning. Debian is the basis for Ubuntu, 
> includes ARM Cortex-A8 support in their mainline and is very familiar 
> to a huge population of developers. It also takes a bit more space on 
> the flash storage to provide the best user experience. 
>
> To provide the best experience of using Debian on BeagleBone Black, we 
> are connecting the switch-over to an increase in the on-board eMMC 
> flash storage from 2GB to 4GB, leaving more free room in which you can 
> work. The eMMC is faster and more reliable than micro-SD cards, so 
> this is adding a lot of value---and a little bit of cost. 
>
> These BeagleBone Blacks with Debian and 4GB eMMC will be called Rev C 
> and they will likely cost a bit more at most distributors. This extra 
> money is helping CircuitCo pay for the additional expense of the eMMC, 
> but also to cover costs for ramping production to higher-than-ever 
> rates. 
>
> With the additional capacity CircuitCo is bringing on, we expect to be 
> able to fill all end-user back-orders for the Rev B boards by early 
> May and shift all production to Rev C. With around 150,000 boards on 
> *distributor* back-orders, we'll be working with distributors to 
> quickly accept board shipments such that CircuitCo isn't sitting on 
> any units. 
>
> Come mid-May, you should be able to easily get your hands on a Rev C 
> board. Some distributors are already taking back-orders for them now. 
> We'll continue to try to push as many boards as we can through 
> distributors *not* taking back-orders as well to make sure there is a 
> continuity of supply. 
>
> Prong #2 - Enabling production of the BeagleBoard Compliant Element14 
> BeagleBone Black 
>
> We've launched a BeagleBoard Compliant logo program, 
> http://beagleboard.org/logo. Element14 is currently the exclusive 
> licensee of this logo program and has agreed to pay a small royalty to 
> the BeagleBoard.org Foundation as part of this license. It means that 
> we've verified they can produce quality clones of BeagleBone Black. It 
> will be up to them to maintain the quality. As with everything going 
> on around BeagleBoard.org, we'll be closely monitoring the public 
> BeagleBoard mailing list, http://beagleboard.org/discuss, for any and 
> all feedback. 
>
> Element14 is the parent company for Embest, who has been making 
> BeagleBone Black replicas for the China market since the initial 
> launch back in April of last year, so they have some experience 
> already. This move takes them beyond just China and will keep them in 
> more lock-step with software and hardware revisions coming from 
> BeagleBoard.org. To satisfy demand, they initially offered some of the 
> Embest-branded boards in the US market, but you'll see the future 
> BealgeBoard Compliant boards will be branded as "element14 BeagleBone 
> Black". 
>
> Element14 has a world-wide reach and a notable production capacity. 
> With all of the growing demand for BeagleBone Black, they will need 
> it. I consider this a huge win for open hardware! 
>
> --Jason 
>

-- 
For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"BeagleBoard" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to beagleboard+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to