Is this not suppose to be an open source project though? As much as I would love to follow the experience of getting a custom display designed and produced, does it not go against the point of this particular project, if we can't build our own one without buying one of your custom displays?
No, the "point" of this project is for me to produce a commercial quality and commercial looking product I can sell, and have fun doing it.
Yes it may well be "open source" in many respects, but it would be silly to strictly design it around having the ability from a few people (and it is literally a few people, like 0.01% of customers) to be able to make it themselves using all off-the-shelf parts and use that as the driving design factor. That is almost zero on my priority list which is (in rough order):
1) Design a product that I want for myself (and close to my original concept for the uSupply)
2) Design a good looking and well engineered product
3) Design a product that is commercially viable (David2 who is doing a bulk of this work is a full time employee on real professional engineering Australian wages, and this will cost me a lot to design and I want a return on that investment), that means BOM cost matters. I cannot live on advertising money forever so I'm also moving into commercially viable niche products, and that is basically why I hired David full time.
4) Design something that makes for some good video content (custom LCD would make for a good how-to video).
and right down the bottom:
5) Think about were OSHW comes into it.
But ultimately why a custom LCD? Because I think they look better and that's what I want.
Trust me, we have debated for many hours and endless google searching for LCD solutions that might be suitable, and ultimately we think that custom LCD is just nicer, as well as being potentially cheaper and more suited to the case design we have.
You
can design a good looking commercial product using all Digikey off-the-shelf parts, but it's ultimately not going to be as nicely polished as what you can do with some custom stuff.
Yeah I can use a nice Newhaven graphic LCD, and have standard Digikey PCB mount tactile buttons through holes in a front panel off-the-shelf box etc etc, the kind of projects you get in Silicon Chip magazine etc, but that's not going to give a nice polished well engineered niche commercial product.
The goal of open hardware should be about
learning and sharing of
designs and
ideas, not making sure every product can be built 100% identical by just anyone.
If you have not seen my video, there are many aspects to OSHW, it's not just some ideal uptopian thing of everything is free and readily available: