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numakerg | 5 years ago
* Within the geographic area that you plan to serve, e.g. USA and potentially Canada, West Europe
numakerg | 5 years ago
* Within the geographic area that you plan to serve, e.g. USA and potentially Canada, West Europe
aacook|5 years ago
My siblings and I tried to set my grandparents up with devices which never worked. People often tell me the same when signing up for NanaGram. Products like digital photo frames are great but require set up and internet. An envelope of 10 prints can be mailed in a couple minutes and provide joy in several places throughout the home; after delivering the first set of photos to my grandparents, I came back the next week and my grandmother taped photos across her entire kitchen. :)
There's also something about printed photos that a glowing pixel can't beat. The closest analogy is vinyl records.
JoshTriplett|5 years ago
You took a real-world impedance mismatch, and you serve as the interface between people so that all of them can interact in the way they most want to interact. There are a lot of potential businesses there, and I'm sure you'd be well positioned to grow into future such adaptation layers; I can imagine a brand built around a family of such inter-generational adaptations, in both directions.
thaumaturgy|5 years ago
These people aren't luddites. It's just easier to do this stuff with physical photos. The tech-obsessed might forget about that sometimes.
codingdave|5 years ago
If they have already solved the harder problem, a future potential pivot to digital delivery hardly feels like a roadblock to me.