Selling 2,500 Jamcorder MIDI Recorders: Hardware Lessons
Most developers treat hardware like a forbidden zone. We're taught that the complexity of physical components is a nightmare compared to the flexibility of code, but shipping 2,500 Jamcorders taught me that the real hurdle isn't the engineering. It's the precision. About a year and a half ago, I stepped out of a pure software career to actually build something you can touch. I spent months iterating through prototypes, moving from a mess of wires on a breadboard to the first pre-production unit. I expected the hardware design to be the part that broke me. It turns out that making a device that works once is easy. Making 2,500 of them work exactly the same way is where things get messy. I've spent the last eighteen months learning exactly where software assumptions crash into physical reality. The Jamcorder Concept The Jamcorder is a dedicated MIDI recorder for pianos. The goal was to move from a conceptual idea to a physical product that people could actuall...