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Hosting a website on a disposable vape

(bogdanthegeek.github.io)
1386 points BogdanTheGeek | 8 comments | | HN request time: 1.036s | source | bottom
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SXX ◴[] No.45250676[source]
Talking of cheap and powerful devices one can also look at Chinese UZ801 4G LTE (Qualcomm MSM8916) dongles. They cost like only $4-5 and pack quite impressive HW: 4GB eMMC, 512MB RAM, actual 4G modem sometimes with 2 sim switching support. Since it's actually old Android SOC there is even GPU and GPS in there. And a lot of work was already done on supporting them:

https://wiki.postmarketos.org/wiki/Zhihe_series_LTE_dongles_...

https://github.com/OpenStick/OpenStick

So yeah if you looking for hardware platform for weird homelab projects that's can be it.

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e145bc455f1 ◴[] No.45251521[source]
Where do i get a MSM8916 board for commercial usage at low volumes(1k)?
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1. dolmen ◴[] No.45252189[source]
What about disassembling 1k dongles?
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2. cjaackie ◴[] No.45252535[source]
underrated comment, probably the way to go with an older chip and under 1k volumes.
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3. tonyhart7 ◴[] No.45252839[source]
"What about disassembling 1k dongles?"

deadass this literally what they do in china, they just disassemble e-waste that don't get used and resell that oversees

replies(1): >>45255498 #
4. Rzor ◴[] No.45253142[source]
And not even that hard to find: "alibaba MSM8916 LTE" on Google and lo and behold: https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/TIANJIE-Qualcomm-MSM8...

$5.92 each for 500-2999 orders. What a time to be alive.

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5. greenavocado ◴[] No.45254058{3}[source]
How much work is it to rip one of these open and reprogram?
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6. WorldPeas ◴[] No.45254534{4}[source]
probably 2 screws at most or some glue/snaps, then put a jtag brush over the contacts, do some sort of unit test and you have a unit. Could take a few hours with a motorized screwdriver and a simple specialized CLI program for programming/testing
7. SpicyUme ◴[] No.45255498[source]
A relative bought several products from Chinese company for a small product development. When he found the most suited device he asked if they'd sell without the enclosure, and maybe 1-2 other boards. They told him at 1000 pcs the best option was to buy them and toss the enclosure.
8. numpad0 ◴[] No.45263664{4}[source]
I had looked into "properly" buying LCDs once, just in case it had been within trivial reach of mine and I could just do what I wanted to do.

The one I was interested in would come in couples of aluminized vacuum sealed bags in a cardboard box, with 2k panels per each bags, laid out on plastic trays and stacked few up. The standard procedure to use these things is to wipe the bag surface to remove contaminants, leave it 24 hours at the factory to equalize temperature to avoid causing condensation, then tear it, and put it through production line before the panels degrade from absorbing too much moisture in the air.

I suppose you can forget about surplus parts or just buy 1/n of 2k parts at n/1 price premium from manufacturers with quote-unquote-nonfunctional parts, should you be contractually required to do so, but the point is, you can't easily produce just 1k of something in excess of 10 or so of prototypes built of no-guarantee spare parts.

Unless the total cost of gutting and reprogramming work exceeds that of fulfilling MOQ amounts of few thousands total(including customer warranty spares, media and storefront demo units, investors thank you specials, lottery prizes and all), it's going to make more sense to just buy and gut existing things, than producing just 1k units.