Have you supported a Kickstarter campaign? Would you do it again? Was the quality of the reward what you expected?
Have you supported a Kickstarter campaign? Would you do it again? Was the quality of the reward what you expected?
I backed and received The Quadshot:
Turned out pretty good but the FC was suspect. Neat idea, but I don't think it really took off (no pun intended).
They had a massive push by been repeatedly put on Hak5 last year at Defcon as I remember
Never thought of it like that, at sometime they do need to come out with the product or wind it up and I would agree that having loads of money slushing around will just mean they will have a tendency to just wish list a project to death sometimes delivering something as per spec is much better than guilting the lily
Just curious, which project did you back?
I backed A Bluetooth Arduino for the mobile age: LightBlue Bean+ by Punch Through.
Having done 20 Kickstarters to date I have something of an opinion. Or maybe a couple of them.
Doug at Land Boards, LLC
In my opinion, Doug, there are more profitable and reliable ways than Kickstarter to promote your projects and launch them. Some tips for a good strategy may give good results, seriously with the advantage - but I repeat, it is just my personal vision, a bit integralist - that you are not confused with the tons of fish-sellers (no idea if this gives the idea but gives a lot of sense in Italian, that is, pescivendoli) and the crowd of senseless ideas pretending to reinvent the world.
Enrico
I backed the C.H.I.P. computer which was an agressively low cost open source computer with great features - very happy with the results. Many doubted this project would deliver what it promised, but they delivered more than I signed up for - the CHIPs came with a bonus plastic case and they supplied a second CHIP with zero shipping charge.
8 months on, revisiting these projects, some of which were discussed on this site at the time they were created.
30 seconds rechargeable battery - this was the scam one, the creator has not responded to his backers.
Tardis in space - still not in space. Some people are questioning if it anything suitable was even constructed.
Pixeom - They claimed they were ready to ship 16 months ago. But claim they had issues shipping them. Today, the shipping problems continue..
King's Assembly - It was supposed to ship in September 2014.. There is the occasional paragraph or two in the comments section and no formal updates. I guess a 'we've run out of funds' will occur at some stage after it has been dragged out sufficiently long.
OpenPi - the last comment on their forum for the past month has been 'What's the 2nd hand market in OpenPi's like?'.
Then there are the ones that try to sell near-equivalent mundane things that are available cheaper elsewhere, relying on backer lack of knowledge/experience.
For example:
Arduino programmer - A shield and programmer for around $25 when you can pick up a similar programmer for $2.68 from China.. in any event, the creator disappeared with the funds and backers got nothing