> MOTM has covered the meat and potatoes aspects fairly completely
This is not quite true! Yes, MOTM has a broad assortment of proven best-in-class designs for "meat & potatoes" modules -- but as Paul and others mentioned earlier in this thread, these modules aren't perceived as AVAILABLE because of the (historically) very long delivery times.
Paul, why not convert these mature designs to SMT so you can offer them assembled with short lead times? Conversions would take less design time than new modules, so you could bring them out quickly, and the resulting modules would be cheaper than the old hand-stuffed ones, right? So MOTM really would have a complete line of highly available, competitively priced meat & potatoes modules.
Now I'm a group A guy and I have almost all the meat & potatoes I need, but a lot of group B guys do not. And there is a steady stream of newcomers to the modular scene -- why not get their business for VCOs, VCFs, etc?
As somebody said, we're all group-A here. But we all want Paul to have continued success and stay in the 5U business and make more of the novel designs that we clamor for. Maybe a steady revenue stream from old designs would help that happen.
My two cents,
skw
Sent from my iPad
On Apr 28, 2010, at 10:40 AM, David Moylan <dave@...> wrote:
Jumping in late, but I think MOTM has covered the meat and potatoes aspects fairly completely. To me that means VCO,VCF,VCA and envelopes, and I guess noise, ring mod.Since that is taken care of it seems to me Paul should let his imagination run wild. I think the Cloud and Terrarium are expressions of this. From a business perspective the focus of new modules should be unique things that aren't offered by other manufacturers in order to draw current MOTM customers AND non-MOTM customers. That could mean a completely unique module, or something done 'better' than other manufacturers, or simply an addition of a feature other offerings don't err..offer. And making them available in the most popular formats just makes sense.I do get bummed to see modules being released in Euro or Frac format before 5U as I prefer the larger format and am heavily invested in it. Hopefully, future designs can be made to share a common board with sub boards or just headers for jacks and pots, so all the panel formats can be built on the same platform and released simultaneouslyThings I'd like to see:Digital Delay / SamplerMixer/PannerWhat about the 200 series?Clocking / Sequencer stuffDavejwbarlow@... wrote:
I don't think I agree with the dichotomy below.
IIRC, one of Paul's "visions" for MOTM was a complete (self contained,
all inclusive) system, and not just a partial supplement to various
other module brands.
IIRC, the "alternative" modules to supplement MOTM were more the terrain
of Oakley, Blacet, Encore, Stooge, etc.; MOTM was designed to be the
"meat and potatoes" of its own 5U system.
IIRC,
John B.
In a message dated 4/27/2010 2:51:56 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
rogerpellegrini@... writes:
I feel compelled to mention an important flaw with this poll. The
potential market for MOTM product can be thought of in a lot of
different ways. One way to look at it is to divide it into two groups:
(A) MOTM die-hards: Comprised mostly of those who built modules
from kits, this group would like to see a broad variety of modules
to complete their MOTM system. Modules that would allow them to
perform functions that other modulars also perform (eg sequencers,
envelope followers, preamps, etc). This group is also likely to
vote for putting choruses, delays, etc., into MOTM format for
completeness, although these are also available elsewhere. This is
a shrinking group, not a growing group, because in the last few
years it has been increasingly difficult to purchase enough modules
to create a complete system that might attract the new customer.
(B) Everyone else who is interested in modulars: They'd like to see
something that's not available elsewhere, because if it is available
elsewhere, they've already got one. They may or may not need the
module in MOTM 5U format. They probably don't want to touch a
soldering iron. They likely expect timely delivery.
This poll, like others before it, will draw largely from group (A).
Group (B), though a much larger potential market, is not well
represented.
Reliance on polls like this results in business decisions to keep
making hopelessly labor intensive kits or variations on utility or
redundant modules that will sell in smaller and smaller numbers.
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