Winner, Name that Ware October 2018

November 30th, 2018

The Ware for October 2018 is an RFID transponder; this particular model was originally used in the early 2000’s in Colorado. Congrats to Barry Callahan for guessing it, email me for your prize!

Name That Ware, October 2018

October 31st, 2018

The Ware for October 2018 is shown below.

Thanks to Michael Dwyer for submitting this ware!

Winner, Name that Ware September 2018

October 31st, 2018

The Ware for September 2018 is a 24GHz microwave radar module (CFK401A1T1R-V2). Congrats to phantom deadline for nailing it, email me for your prize! Snapped a photo of this one nestled inside of those road-side “Your Current Speed Is” signs, thought it was pretty cool looking. The high-performance RF PCB dielectrics always catch my eye with their ivory-white color.

Name that Ware, September 2018

September 29th, 2018

The Ware for September 2018 is shown below.

Been a busy month banging my head against the wall of getting FCC/CE certification for NeTV2, and spending thousands of dollars on dozens of tests — more time, effort, and treasure than developing the product itself. This is my least favorite aspect of product development — the regulatory burdens are just so immense if you actually try to comply with all the rules, especially with such a global marketplace (every region you legally serve multiplies your paperwork load, not to mention different SKUs for power supplies & manual/packaging translations).

Rather ironic to have finally figured out all the technical tricks to make production in small batches efficient, only to find there’s no efficient way to deal with regulatory hurdles. It’s a discouraging message for small-time makers and innovators, and tilts things in the favor of large corporations with the funding and scale to build internal certification teams and facilities to make the regulatory process efficient and predictable.

Winner, Name that Ware August 2018

September 29th, 2018

The Ware for August 2018 is Micom router, with an EasyRouter HCF feature pack installed. It’s interesting how the ROM cartridge drew many people to the conclusion this was some sort of an old laser printer motherboard thanks to the ancient practice of purchasing fonts as physical ROM cartridges — I would have thought the same initially, except most laser printers also have a pretty substantial general purpose CPU built into them, and there isn’t enough RAM on board either for that type of application. SAM nailed it — I only slightly blurred some of the numbers to try and give something to search for, as Micom is a pretty obscure company and almost everything about this piece of hardware pre-dates modern search engines. Congrats, email me for your prize!