Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 29th Feb 2012 09:47 UTC
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Member since:
2006-09-01
This pretty much it. They're engineers doing this in their spare time and not logistics experts. They're experts at hardware design and building parts to a cost, but they're amateurs when it comes to distribution.
They really should have done a better job of this. Announcing the distributors and delaying the release a couple of weeks would have been better.
They could of also went head and used their web store for the first batch and the distributors for everything else.
Hopefully in the future people will be able to order from one of the distributors from the RPi homepage.
It's been well documented there would only be 10,000 Pi's on launch day, and that is all the non-profit foundation could source at one time due to financial reasons.
They were very upfront about not having enough RPis to go around. Switching to the licensing model with the distributors shows they were anticipating the demand, as it will increase the supply in the future, but the plans weren't fully baked at the moment, which has caused problems.
People are just being impatient. Constrained supplies happen at the beginning of any hardware launch, and people get huffy about that too. The RPi organization has the problem of not having another product for people to buy like Intel, AMD, Apple, or Nvidia.
Besides, early adopters get f***ed. If you absolutely have to have to have the latest and greatest on the first day's it's released, be prepared. Realize you're a beta, if not alpha, tester, and understand you may not get one in the initial scrum, the model on Ebay is going to have 1000% markup, or the widget may be super buggy.
Everyone needs to chill out, and realize there will be more tomorrow.
Seriously. The distributors are never going to see this much traffic again, so they're not going to invest the money.
"Why didn't they use an Amazon store?" was my first thought when I first heard about the carnage on Slashdot.