Recurring advice from conversations I have with folks at other hardware startups is “prototype as blazingly fast as you possibly can"
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Replying to @starsandrobots
“MVP” hardware and MVP software are produced using very different approaches, and shortcuts for robust hardware to test with users:critical.
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Replying to @starsandrobots
For example: do you know how to assemble electronics dead-bug? What about potting? Prototype get shaken as you lyft to mtng and wires break.
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Replying to @starsandrobots
I wonder if my twitter is up for a conversation about fav hardware prototyping techniques. Or whether maybe this is a workshop topic.
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Replying to @starsandrobots
Things that are unthinkable in product are massive time-savers in proto. Your thinking shifts-“how can I spend less than half a day on this"
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Replying to @starsandrobots
One of the fastest prototypers I've ever met would tweak a board until 100% of nets would autoroute. This is inverted from product thinking.
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Replying to @starsandrobots
Do you know how disgusted most EEs are even thinking of that? But then one person gets to move on and the other is doing painstaking layout
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Replying to @starsandrobots
@starsandrobots At least until the board fails and you spend weeks debugging...1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @ZetaSyanthis
@starsandrobots There is definitely a balance though.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
@ZetaSyanthis prototype's not supposed to last forerever! But yeah if you haven't learned what you need to move on..
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