Hardware Startups with Fexingo: Devices, Robotics, and Manufacturing Tech Companies

PODCAST · business

Hardware Startups with Fexingo: Devices, Robotics, and Manufacturing Tech Companies

Lucas and Luna get into the gritty details of hardware startups — the kind that design, prototype, and manufacture physical devices, from industrial robotics to consumer gadgets. Each episode centers on a specific company or technology: how a robotics firm navigated the transition from lab prototype to production line, why a particular sensor startup chose one material over another, or what the unit economics of a new 3D-printing venture actually look like. Lucas brings the numbers — bill of materials, gross margins, capital expenditure — while Luna tests the story against real engineering constraints and manufacturing realities. They talk about supply chain bottlenecks, tooling costs, and the long timelines that separate hardware from software. No hype, no glossing over the hard parts. The listener is someone who thinks about hardware the way most people think about code: a founder, an engineer, or an investor trying to separate a real breakthrough from a Kickstarter illusion. Every c

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Lucas and Luna get into the gritty details of hardware startups — the kind that design, prototype, and manufacture physical devices, from industrial robotics to consumer gadgets. Each episode centers on a specific company or technology: how a robotics firm navigated the transition from lab prototype to production line, why a particular sensor startup chose one material over another, or what the unit economics of a new 3D-printing venture actually look like. Lucas brings the numbers — bill of materials, gross margins, capital expenditure — while Luna tests the story against real engineering constraints and manufacturing realities. They talk about supply chain bottlenecks, tooling costs, and the long timelines that separate hardware from software. No hype, no glossing over the hard parts. The listener is someone who thinks about hardware the way most people think about code: a founder, an engineer, or an investor trying to separate a real breakthrough from a Kickstarter illusion. Every c

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Fexingo

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