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.

https://dev.to/numbpill3d/the-esp32-has-quietly-become-one-of-the-most-interesting-hacker-devices-alive-3fa3

The ESP32 Has Quietly Become One of the Most Interesting Hacker Devices Alive

Rainwater was dripping through a hole in the gas station awning onto a plastic patio chair that...

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@cdarwin

A different situation arises when you're dependent on a piece of expensive hardware (like me and my wheelchair). All nonessential parts of it have been broken off by the environment over time, it's scuffed and almost always dirty and has duct tape and ad hoc coat-hangar tools all over it.

(Currently working on adding a packet radio repeater to it 😊)

@cdarwin great read. When I first started experimenting with the ESP8266, I saw the writing on the wall. These things are unreasonably cheap - do whatever.

@cdarwin I bought a Raspberry Pi off someone who chucked a box of random microcontrollers & sensors in with it. That was the start of a long, slow slide into a rabbit hole lined with ESP boards.

It also invoked #HomeAssistant, which is a whole parallel universe of tinkering!

@cdarwin entirely endorse but that the pi picos from the raspberry pi folk were the game changer for me...
@cdarwin I have almost a dozen cheap portable emulation devices that I flash new OSes on them occasionally to try new things, but my hacked New 3DS barely gets touched because it would be $400 or more to replace, and days of work to get it to where it is now.
@cdarwin thats new perspective for me. Thank you. I have zero experience with expensive hardware :)