Cheap Hardware Changes Human Behavior
There is a psychological difference between experimenting with a four dollar board and experimenting with a five hundred dollar device.
People become fearless around cheap hardware.
They cut traces without hesitation. They overvolt things just to see what happens. They shove prototypes into Altoids tins with electrical tape and keep moving.
A lot of genuinely interesting hardware culture emerges from environments where failure carries almost no economic consequence.
That matters more than technical specifications.
Expensive hardware often becomes ornamental. People baby it. They curate it. They build identities around owning it.
Cheap hardware gets modified until it resembles evidence recovered from a flooded basement.
The ESP32 thrives precisely because nobody treats it with reverence.
