On Tue, Mar 14, 2023 at 09:16:02PM +0000, Jonathan Chapman via cctalk wrote:
> > But, as some who worked
> > to bring a product to market only to see people on forums say "Skip
> > buying it from Jim for $$$$, you can build the same thing by yourself
> > for $ from AliExpress parts or buy this eBay knockoff for 2X$", I will
> > admit that is somewhat infuriating. If the hobby community is not
> > willing to pay a bit of premium to support those who bring out the
> > products that benefit the community, the designers will get disgusted
> > and leave. 
> 
> Agree 100%. We stopped running XT-IDEs for a while due to the proliferation 
> of knockoffs and the total indifference of a good portion of the community -- 
> some folks even get hostile when you suggest they maybe not buy knockoffs 
> that can't even abide by the terms of the open-source project license!
> 
> I'd designed a universal "bolts to any existing XT-IDE and doesn't eat a 
> slot" CF adapter that never got run. After posting a development picture of 
> the prototype, one of the knockoff folks ripped the design off before I had 
> even received my quote from Keystone for the custom ISA brackets. No way was 
> I going to spend on a run of 500x custom brackets when someone was already 
> ripping off the idea. There are other things that we've chosen not to run for 
> the same basic reason, and others that won't get open sourced.
> 
> > Thus, I'd say if a Saleae is something to pursue, try to buy
> > one from them, to support their awesome GUI, and then drop by eBay and
> > grab 2 or 4 of the knockoffs to put in your toolbox or travel debugging
> > rucksack.
> 
> I'll go further and say don't buy knockoffs, period.
> 
> It's nice to support the designers in some capacity, but buying 
> knockoffs fuels the ecosystem that creates knockoffs. With our stuff, 
> it's never been that a single knockoff operation eats our lunch, it's 
> that there's a zillion of them that run maybe 100 boards and 
> disappear. Death by a thousand cuts. They charge $1-5 less while 
> running the cheapest possible boards, stuffing with salvaged chips, 
> etc. Meanwhile, we're having to pay for runs of boards with hard gold 
> plating and buy genuine parts from Mouser.

It's not so black and white.
There are severl indications that clones of Saleae LAs being on the 
market is not due to some Chinese pirate shop stealing the original IP 
against the will of the creators.

* The main IC in a 16 channel Saleae LA is a Xilinx Spartan 6, which 
  makes it rather trivial to protect the bitstream to an extent that 
  makes it close to impossible to run it on contraband hardware. Saleae 
  chose not to make use of that.

* The Saleae host software doesn't attempt to validate that the hardware 
  it talks to is genuine even though that would be trivial to do as 
  well.

* No import stop of clones or anything like that was attempted by the 
  company.

* Listings on eBay, etc. of Saleae clones are advertised as "Saleae", 
  which could easily be stopped by the company, that has happened 
  thousands of times for other products.

Clones of Saleae devices are on the market since a long time. Saleae 
brought out new hardware revisions since then, so the argument 'they 
were taken by surprise' doesn't hold up.

I see this as a marketing stunt.
"Hobbyists can buy the cheap stuff from China, companies where things 
matter will still buy from us. Word of mouth will help us."
That strategy is working pretty well actually and does so for other 
companies as well.
Let's face it, there is a sizable number of people who will never ever 
buy a logic analyzer for north of $1000. Either because they can't 
afford it or are too greedy. That is not lost revenue for the company.  
Either those people buy a clone or they don't have a Saleae product, end 
of story.

Should you buy a knockoff iphone? I don't know.
Though a knockoff Saleae LA won't make you end up in hell.

-Alex

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