You can't make prototype boards cheaper than $45/each. By the time you account for layout, board cost, solder mask, and testing it starts to really add up. See http://www.tekgear.com/html/news/n1_hackers.html for more info on putting the 111 chip on the 110 board. -Tony > -----Original Message----- > From: Brian Kuriyama [mailto:] > Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2003 9:42 AM > To:
> Subject: Finally... (Kopin discussion) > > > I have no clue what happened... BUT I'M HAPPY!!! :-D > My last service request and little chat with Motorola was > back in October, and supposedly they said they sent my sample > order for 10 more chips, but it never came. I guess someone > pulled some more strings or something, but I just recieved my > 10 chips yesterday. It says "Priority Overnight", which came > as a big suprise to me, as I live in Hawaii. To be honest, I > never expected to recieve those chips. > > Anyways, enough of my story. The real reason i'm bother you > people, is that now I have my chips, What am I supposed to do > with them? I really don't want to spend $400 on boards from > Tekgear. Can anyone offer me alternatives? > > Thanks again, > Brian Kuriyama > > > -- > Subscription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with > subject of "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" to >
Wear-Hard Mailing List Archive > (searchable): http://wearables.blu.org Please, *PLEASE* don't > subscribe through a forward/expander/false domain > > > -- Subscription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with subject of "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" to
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