ThumMusings

Bringing the user interface of music-making into the 21st Century, and changing the world... one note at a time.

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Name: ThumMeister
Location: Austin, Texas, United States

In the late 1980’s, I tried to write insanely great code for the Mac and help others do so, too. When Windows swept through the Valley in 1991-2, I realized my great code would become worthless if the Mac platform sank. I became very interested in knowing how to spot winning platforms. Since Microsoft clearly knew how to make its platforms succeed, I joined its Systems Strategy Group. While designing and executing practical "technology evangelism" campaigns, I studied the theory behind the practice, eventually teaching mandatory "how-to" seminars to Microsoft's new evangelists. I left Microsoft in 2000, looking for a new industry to disrupt. When my wife quit her piano lessons after six months of diligent practice, saying that “music is just too hard,” I knew I’d found it. Hammering the Web relentlessly, I found a novel combination of old ideas which could make music dramatically easier to teach, learn, & play, more emotionally expressive, and expand the frontiers of tonality. This blog tells the story of my bringing those innovations to market.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Why the Thummer Will Succeed

Proposed new musical instruments tend to fail in the marketplace because:
  1. they have to be much better – not just slightly better – than traditional instruments in at least two or three different ways that consumers care about, and
  2. they are sold through a traditional bricks & mortar distribution channel, which favors "me-too" products over radically different designs.
The Thummer and Thumtronics' sales model solve both problems.

1. The Thummer is WAY Better
  • The Thummer allows novices to learn music much faster – at least three time faster, and (with the ThumMusic System) perhaps ten times faster – than traditional instruments.
  • The Thummer is has far more expressive power than any other instrument, due to its thumb-operated joysticks and internal motion sensors. With these, musicians can control up to ten different independent musical variables simultaneously while playing, instead of the two or three variables available in most traditional musical instruments.
  • The Thummer offers artists the opportunity to explore vast new creative frontiers through its novel support for Dynamic Tuning.
  • The Thummer is tiny – potentially even pocket-sized.
  • The Thummer can be very affordable, due to its being made from standard, off-the-shelf consumer electronics components.

Simple, Powerful, Portable, & Affordable – these are the keys to success in ANY market. That’s why the Thummer can – and will – succeed.

2. The Thummer Has Low Inventory and Distribution Costs

Most musical instruments are large, heavy things, made from special-purpose components. For example, my Roland ep-97 digital piano weighs 32 pounds, which means that it would cost over $105 to ship it across the USA overnight. The Thummer, on the other hand, weighs about a pound, and would cost only a quarter as much to ship. Furthermore, the Thummer occupies only about a tenth of the volume of the ep-97, reducing my inventory and bulk shipping costs accordingly. Keeping inventory and distribution costs low is essential for products that are likely to start out as low-volume niche products before they climb up the Long Tail up into the mainstream. Most proposed new musical instruments are simply too big, too heavy, and too expensive to be profitable in a small niche, so they never get the opportunity to climb out into the mainstream. The Thummer can survive profitably as a niche product while musicians and music educators learn to exploit its revolutionary strengths. World-changing revolutions take time, and the Thummer can be profitable throughout.

That's why the Thummer will succeed: because it addresses both the product issues and the business process issues that have led other new musical instruments to fail.

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4 Comments:

Blogger MusicScienceGuy said...

May I testify through direct experience that the Thummer keyboard layout is indeed, as Jim claims, better than a traditional keyboard. I'm "unit testing", using a homebuilt unit and find that each side of the keyboard is at least twice as fast to learn, (perhaps much higher).
The ingenious innovation of having the right and left hand layouts be mirror images, allowing for skill transfer between hands, definitely works (I was dubious at first), giving a further 50% or more enhancement - it's wonderful to learn something with one hand and not have to spend nearly as much time training the other.
The meshing of the keyboard layout with music theory, kinesology and human perception is, however, likely to be the greatest leap forward; its fun to have an instrument where the melody and the chords intertwine and it's easy to add chords to a melody.

December 9, 2007 10:53 PM  
Blogger Richard said...

Is the Thummer available yet? When will it be? What will the cost be?

December 10, 2007 10:45 AM  
Blogger ThumMeister said...

The Thummer will be available seven to nine months after I line up the capital I need to complete its engineering and make the first production run. The cost is expected to be $375 for a Freedom Thummer or $575 for an eMotion Thummer. The future Pocket Thummer should be under $99. All prices retail, direct from Thumtronics, in US dollars.

December 10, 2007 12:37 PM  
Blogger ThumMeister said...

The Thummer is expected to be available seven to nine months after Thumtronics gets the cash it needs to complete engineering and manufacture the first commercial Thummers. The Freedom Thummer (no motion sensors) is expected to retail, direct from Thumtronics, for $375; the eMotion Thummer, with motion sensors, for $575. The future Pocket Thummer (with no motion sensors, but with built-in sounds) should retail for under $99.

Join the ThumClub to be notified when Thummers become available: www.thummer.com/contactus.asp.

Thanks! :-)

December 10, 2007 12:41 PM  

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