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To be fair, we're talking about two orders of magnitude higher scale here. The first LZ7 run was something like 20-30 cases, and it's assembled by the user, so packaging the I/O panel (which is already a WEEE registered product) separately circumvents the need to jump though waste regulatory hoops and the low number of units means it can be hand packaged. And the construction of the case allows for very quick and relatively cheap prototyping.Really, the approach here is very different. You are trying to build a self-sustaining business from the get-go, you already have distribution partnerships with the biggest supplier of PC parts in the EU and thousands of interested customers.The Lazer3D brand to me looks more like it will rely on natural growth and word of mouth, and I think either approach is equally valid.
To be fair, we're talking about two orders of magnitude higher scale here. The first LZ7 run was something like 20-30 cases, and it's assembled by the user, so packaging the I/O panel (which is already a WEEE registered product) separately circumvents the need to jump though waste regulatory hoops and the low number of units means it can be hand packaged. And the construction of the case allows for very quick and relatively cheap prototyping.
Really, the approach here is very different. You are trying to build a self-sustaining business from the get-go, you already have distribution partnerships with the biggest supplier of PC parts in the EU and thousands of interested customers.
The Lazer3D brand to me looks more like it will rely on natural growth and word of mouth, and I think either approach is equally valid.