[Coco] CoCo4! 50% done!

Bill Loguidice bill at armchairarcade.com
Wed Feb 5 14:20:53 EST 2014


Is it really that simple, though? I don't know. I mean, I think "we" as the
community could be able to come to something of a consensus of what we'd be
willing to pay and what basic features would need to be met, but then would
that be enough. What numbers are we talking about here? Would 100 of us
willing to pay $200 for a faster/better/compatible CoCo 3 FPGA clone be
enough to get it done the right way? More? Less? I think we'd need to know
what realistic targets are. Maybe we'll find that the numbers just won't
work, if say, it would take 300 people at $200.

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Bill Loguidice, Managing Director; Armchair Arcade,
Inc.<http://www.armchairarcade.com>
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On Wed, Feb 5, 2014 at 2:05 PM, Nick Marentes <nickma at optusnet.com.au>wrote:

> Mark Marlette <mmarlette at ...> writes:
>
> > So what is reasonable? $100, $200, $400??? What is reasonable to one is
> unreasonable to another.
> >
> > The amount NRE involved in the development of these platforms is
> staggering.... If Altera is charging what
> > they are for their DE-1 or SOCs can you imagine what the pricing would be
> for each on a 100 unit run?
>
>
> What we're looking at is a price that most people would be prepared to pay
> in order to get enough units out there to encourage software development of
> new products.
>
> That is not a price based on what the cost to develop and produce but what
> the market percieves it to be worth to them.
>
> The reality is that even $400 is really a reasonable price. I remember
> paying around $400 for my CoCo3 back in the 80's and that didn't include a
> disk drive, so the FPGA CoCo is good value considering it has SD card
> storage, more colors and runs much faster.
>
> But are people prepared to pay that for a retro hobby computer when you can
> buy a laptop with built in LCD and hard drive for less nowadays?
>
> I think the magic price point is somewhere in the vicinity of $200.
> Anything
> more than that and people will question what they really want it for when
> there is no software that particularly uses the new features.
>
> Nick
>
>



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