I believe it would be a great project to take some mass produced hardware and software and find a way to solve M100 specific problems. That's true open source.
I saw that Uber cheap pi. They don't quote power but I believe it is vastly more than the M100 itself. It is all tradeoffs! On Saturday, November 28, 2015, John Martin <johnjessemar...@gmail.com> wrote: > I would like to have a NADSBox and REX card. But these items are expensive. > > I am sure there are cheaper alternatives. If you can buy a Raspberry Pi ranging from $5 to $35. That is very CHEAP for what it can do. > > https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/raspberry-pi-zero/ > > John M > > > > If it made financial sense, I might consider making another run of > > NADSBoxes, but it just doesn't. With all the setup costs with > > machining the enclosures, PCB fab NRE, etc., plus component costs, my > > up-front cash expenditure the last time was $12,000, and that was > > before selling a single NADSBox. Sadly, while there is demand for > > additional NADSBoxes, there doesn't seem to be *enough* demand to > > even cover the expense of building them. > > That's a real shame, Ken. The NADSBox is amazing, and I use it all the > time. > > I recently got a REX card from Stephen Adolph and that, in combination > with the NADSbox, make my T102 a truly useful everyday tool. > > I think a REX card in combination with the DeskLink TPDD emulator > running on your Window