Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Christopher Havel
Thanks, Hendrik! Sorry for the delayed reply, as well... 'twas out running errands. ___ arm-netbook mailing list arm-netbook@lists.phcomp.co.uk http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook Send large attachments to

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Adam Van Ymeren
Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton writes: > On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 4:40 PM, Adam Van Ymeren wrote: > >> This is why I was thinking of letting Luke do the printing and order >> of printers, just having the crowd put up funds for the purchase of >> printers, which the

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68 On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 5:06 PM, Miguel Ángel García wrote: > El [DATE], "[NAME]" <[ADDRESS]> escribió: > > > >>ok so a quick status update: >> >>* Frida, in Shenzhen, have a customer currently

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Christopher Havel
...for the people still on Imperial units, rather than the SI/"metric" system -- 45 C is 113 F. ~36-37 C is body temperature (I've memorized 36 from my high school days, but Google says 37) which is pretty dang hot. At 113 F my skin would probably boil off... well, that's what it would feel like,

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 4:40 PM, Adam Van Ymeren wrote: > This is why I was thinking of letting Luke do the printing and order of > printers, just having the crowd put up funds for the purchase of printers, > which the backers would receive the printer after the laptops have

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Miguel Ángel García
El [DATE], "[NAME]" <[ADDRESS]> escribió: >ok so a quick status update: > >* Frida, in Shenzhen, have a customer currently ordering their 2.8in >FRD280J3703D SPI-based LCD. this means it's possible to place an >order for less than the normal MOQ of 1,000 so we go with that one for >the 15in

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Peter Carlson
Having just got into 3D printing myself I would suggest it is not yet a plug and play experience yet. Although the printer I got was very definitely a DIY project requiring assembly etc. the groups I am following also suggests to me that quality is very definitely an acquired skill that comes

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Adam Van Ymeren
On April 27, 2017 9:23:40 AM EDT, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: >On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 1:00 PM, Christian Kellermann > wrote: > >> As the current issue is time in producing them I would also scratch >> the printed parts order myself, maybe in exchange

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Bluey
Hi All, For what it’s worth, I’d like to thank all of you involved for taking on this important project. I started subscribing to this list just a few days ago so please forgive me if specific design requirements/parameters have already been decided for the EOMA computer and my comments are

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 3:17 PM, Hrvoje Lasic wrote: >> https://world.taobao.com/item/526287577504.htm > this 3d printer looks ok, can you update on quality when available? sure. i usually run these at 200mm/s which is a lot of fun - 4x what they're "rated" at. l.

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Hrvoje Lasic
For 2000 pcs maybe it make sense, if ti is really small part you can try for 150 sets and 35 parts each no big chance for molding to make sense. It would be too expensive. On 27 April 2017 at 14:57, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 12:54 PM, Hrvoje

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 1:00 PM, Christian Kellermann wrote: > As the current issue is time in producing them I would also scratch > the printed parts order myself, maybe in exchange for a discount on > future designs done by Luke and print them myself. People with access >

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Christian Kellermann
* Adam Van Ymeren [170427 13:49]: > On April 27, 2017 6:50:39 AM EDT, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton > wrote: > >ok so a quick status update: > > > >* Frida, in Shenzhen, have a customer currently ordering their 2.8in > >FRD280J3703D SPI-based LCD. this means it's

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Hrvoje Lasic
Hi Luke, How many pcs you have to print/do each? what is your budget? Have you consider to do plastic molds? Have you consider to do molds from aluminum that are lower priced but could stand lower number of shots (like 10k)? Silicon molds? Where you need to produce it? Regards, Hrvoje On 27

Re: [Arm-netbook] SPI-based LCDs, 3D printing, RISC-V

2017-04-27 Thread Adam Van Ymeren
On April 27, 2017 6:50:39 AM EDT, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: >ok so a quick status update: > >* Frida, in Shenzhen, have a customer currently ordering their 2.8in >FRD280J3703D SPI-based LCD. this means it's possible to place an >order for less than the normal MOQ of

[Arm-netbook] libre 64-bit risc-v SoC

2017-04-27 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
ok so it would seem that the huge amount of work going into RISC-V means that it's on track to becoming a steamroller that will squash proprietary SoCs, so i'm quite happy to make sure that it's not-so-subtly nudged in the right direction. i've started a page where i am keeping notes: