I think what happened at HP is a huge shame. What really happened was that somehow the culture of Compaq took over from the 'engineer's engineer' attitude that HP had. I wasn't thrilled when they split off Agilent, but in hindsight it is a good job they did, otherwise they would by rebadging budget Won-hung-low meters by now.
I can see where TI are coming from with this board (out of the marketing meeting room I think), but I can't really see it achieving much in the pro engineering circles. Sure, it'll get a load of school, highschool and college/uni students thinking benevolently about TI (and I'm really not knocking that, it is a good investment) but, to anyone who knows the market, there are many alternatives out there that do so much more! Incidentally, I watched the unboxing video. I especially loved the bit where the guy said "so you got home and you are pumped because your kit is waiting for you in the porch". Has anyone ever thought "hey WOW my $4:30 kit from TI is here"? I did note that he was wearing the TI kit watch. He must have positively wet himself when that arrived.
I was thinking about getting one of these myself, then I thought - "hang on, will I ever use it?". I tend to use Microchip PICs for 8-bit (cheap, nice easy DIP cases for dev work) or ARM7/9s from various vendors (cheap, hugely powerful for the price and power consumption, reasonably consistent architecture) and I can't justify having to learn yet another architecture and dev suite, when the likelihood is that I just won't use them. Ironically, in another email that dropped in my in-box at the same time, TI were promoting their new AM37x series (based on the ARM A8 at 1GHz) which goes by the name of Sitara. Which sounds like a small Indian musical instrument, but never mind. They want me to buy the evaluation module for that (note - NOT the development kit). How much? A mere $1500. It is a great looking piece of kit, but $1500? Ouch.
I think you were a bit unfair about the packaging Dave, the one in the video doesn't look much bigger than a CD jewel case, plus maybe 3-4cm thick? The smallest packaging I get stuff from Digikey from is 9x9x4 inches anyway, even with maybe half a dozen ICs in. Speaking of which, my current award for wastefulness goes to NXP (Philips). I ordered 3 samples from them. The arrived INDIVIDUALLY in 11x14 inch jiffy bags. Inside that was a cardboard box, and inside that some antistatic foam, and the dispersive bag. Must have cost a fortune!
Mike