Re: device tree not the answer in the ARM world [was: Re: runningDebian on a Cubieboard]

From: Rob Landley
Date: Wed May 08 2013 - 20:25:24 EST


On 05/08/2013 03:19:23 AM, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote:
On Wed, May 8, 2013 at 4:44 AM, Rob Landley <rob@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>> whereas the EOMA initiative is at the complete opposite end of the
>> spectrum. and products based around the EOMA standards, although
>> there is a cost overhead of e.g. around $6 in parts for EOMA-68, there
>> is a whopping great saving of 30 to 40% to the customer when compared
>> to other products *if* your end-user is prepared to swap / share CPU
>> Cards between two products. if they share the CPU Card between three
>> products then the saving to them is even greater.

It's only "whopping great" if it allows them to lower the absolute cost of the product. If it just buys you a 30% cost savings in a niche with an 18 month half life of hardware depreciation, sheer inventory management can get you that much.

The big limit of moore's law is these days you should be able to 4 megs of memory for a nickel, and you can't. The overhead of slicing it that small dwarfs the cost of the actual component, the RATIO changes but the cheapest netbook is still $200 or so. They don't _make_ disks that store less than a gigabyte anymore.

I should be able to put together the equivalent of Linus's original 1991 PC for under a dollar, and I can't. (Not unless I manage to manufacture several million of them.) I've been awaiting disposable computing for years, but it's not here yet.

If your savings of 30% to the customer just means their router has 2 gigs of ram instead of 1 gig of ram but is the same price as the one on the next shelf because the fixed costs dominate and you added $6 to that...

> In theory, Moore's Law says that buys you... 9 months?

and 6 months in to that 9 months you bring out the next CPU Card, and
the next, and the next, and the next, and the next.

there's a hell of a lot of history already behind the EOMA
initiatives.

At what point does that history become a downside? (We've had 20 "year of the Linux on the Desktop" announcements. Nobody pays any attention to new ones, too much crying wolf. Anyway, I explained in the video why that's a systemic problem in our development model, tangent...)

If I want a cheap plastic Linux system I can buy a raspberry-pi ($35) or pandaboard-black ($45 and the HDMI driver isn't a binary-only blob). Do these systems participate in your EOMA thing? Would they benefit from it if they did? If so, given your history, why don't they?

> A phone is a mass-produced consumer electronics device. Is "I can rip the
> guts out of my DVD player and re-use it" a commercially interesting
> statement?

you've missed the point.

Agreed. That's why I keep asking, trying to figure out what the point is.

EOMA-68 CPU Cards are separately-sold
mass-volume *interchangeable* products, i.e. being packaged in legacy
PCMCIA housings they have the exact same advantages of PCMCIA except
now it's the *CPU* that's interchangeable between products.

More mass-volume than phones?

I'm trying to think of the last time I got a new nebook with legacy PCMCIA in it. It's been more than 5 years...

nobody in their right mind swaps the DVD electronics, they just buy
another DVD player. including the mechanical part and the built-in
PSU, and the GPL-violating software running on it.

Yes, that was sort of my point. What's _different_? And how is this not
http://xkcd.com/927 ?

>> what they *don't* have to do is put the entire product in landfill.
>>
>> etc. etc. i could go on about this at some length but i've already
>> done so lots of times.
>
>
> Link?

links.

Links !> link. Links ! even = to link, actually. It's one of them marketing 101 things. (See "paradox of choice", "elevator pitch", "marketing hook"...)

You know how when you start a fire you have a spark, kindling, and THEN logs? You escalate? Or when somebody writes a book the first sentence gets them to read the first page, the first page gets them to read the first chapter, the first chapter gets them invested in the story so they read the rest of the book...

In marketing you earn five seconds of attention, use it to earn thirty seconds of attention, use that to earn five minutes of attention...

You had five minutes worth of my interest, but that was not a five minute list of links.

http://www.c2mtl.com/eye50/ideas/the-rhombus-tech-eoma-68-initiative/
http://rhombus-tech.net/articles/eoma68_in_education/

Ok, obvious from those first two links that rhombus-tech is behind it. (Never heard of 'em, which is a bad sign given this "history" you speak of.) So, rhombus-tech.net... And there is a FAQ! First question says your goal is to create synergy.

Yeah, I'm not too big into synergy, I generally stick with the diet Monster and Rockstar flavors, occasional Full Throttle citrus when I've got some diet mountain dew to mix it with (but that's not diet, and the sugar does bad things to my sinuses).

I don't think I'm the target audience here.

Rob--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/