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WritePhi Commercial Blueprint License
Publicly online since 2010 · U.S. patent applications since 2012 · inventions offered since 2014. The work of Christopher Gabriel Brown, independently documented.
WritePhi Commercial License — Build, Sell, Profit
You can now build and sell products made from WritePhi designs. Full commercial rights across all six sub-blueprints. This is the license that turns a study project into a business.
What You Get
- All 6 sub-blueprints (Writer, Blank, Dicer, PKG, Chassis, Library)
- All cross-integration guides (from Family bundle)
- Right to manufacture: Writer units, blanks, packaged chips, Chassis systems, custom ICs
- Right to sell: Any of the above, direct to customers, within USA, in USD
- Right to offer services: Dicer-as-a-service, custom IC design, packaging services
- Right to modify: Adapt designs for your specific use case (e.g., ruggedized versions, aerospace variants)
- Commercial-grade LICENSE.md with detailed terms
Business Models You Can Build
Writer Manufacturer
Build and sell WritePhi Writer units. Target market: makers, university labs, small R&D shops. Estimated selling price: $2,500-5,000 per unit. Estimated cost: $800-1,500 in BOM.
Custom Blank Manufacturer (Path 1)
Manufacture and sell Path 1 WritePhi Blanks. Target market: WritePhi Writer owners. Estimated selling price: $50-200 per blank. Estimated cost: $5-20 per blank at scale.
Dicer Service Provider
Offer Dicer-as-a-Service. Customer ships you their written blanks; you dice them and ship back. Estimated pricing: $50-200 per disc. Ideal for makers who can't afford their own Dicer.
Custom IC House
Design custom ICs for customers using the WritePhi SDK. Estimated pricing: $10,000-100,000 per custom IC design. Fast turnaround (2-8 weeks vs 6-12 months for traditional ASIC).
Chassis + Cards Integrator
Build Chassis systems for enterprise customers (data center, embedded compute). Estimated pricing: $5,000-50,000 per system. Reference designs get you 90% there.
Scope Limits (What You Cannot Do)
- Sub-license: You cannot resell/sublicense the technology to third parties (that requires WRITEPHI-ENGPKG acquisition)
- Claim invention: Must attribute WritePhi to Christopher Gabriel Brown / cri-one.com
- Export outside USA: USA-only restriction runs with the license
- Military/weapons: No use in weapons systems without explicit written consent
- Undisclosed competition: If you sell alongside competing platforms, must disclose the WritePhi origin
What Chris Retains
- Original IP ownership (patents, trade secrets)
- Right to license to other non-competing buyers
- Right to develop platform improvements (which you can get access to for +$5k/year maintenance—optional)
Your Responsibilities
- Manufacturing: You set up production, QA, supply chain
- Customer support: You handle end-user questions
- Regulatory compliance: FCC (Chassis-Card, Writer), IEC 60825 (Writer, Dicer), OSHA (workplace lasers)
- Warranty: Standard warranty terms up to you; Chris makes no product warranties to end customers
- Payment: USA-based bank account for USD receipts; typical credit card processing (Stripe, Square)
Timeline to Revenue
- Fastest (Dicer service, if you already have a Dicer): 2-4 weeks
- Custom IC house (if you have SDK skill): 4-8 weeks
- Writer manufacturer: 4-6 months to first shippable unit
- Blank manufacturer (Path 1): 12-18 months to reliable production
- Chassis integrator: 4-6 months to first shippable system
Why $24,999?
Chris priced this to be accessible to serious entrepreneurs while still respecting the value. Traditional foundry licensing costs $500k-10M just to touch the process; $24,999 for full commercial rights on a proven platform is a bargain by comparison.
Upgrade Path
If you want inventor support (design reviews, troubleshooting, priority access): upgrade to WRITEPHI-BUILDHELP ($250,000). If you want to own the platform and sub-license to others: upgrade to WRITEPHI-ENGPKG ($12,750,000).
Portfolio conversation — WritePhi (Project 57) + WritePhi Devices (Project 58)
These two product families are one continuous story in two chapters, not unrelated store listings. WritePhi (Project 57) is the kitchen-table fabrication layer: Writer → Blank → Dicer → PKG → Chassis → Library makes replaceable WritePhi dies at the bench. WritePhi Devices / WPD (Project 58) is the deployment layer for those same dies: the V2 inset package (carried forward from WRITEPHI-PKG and cut geometry from WRITEPHI-DICER) drops into pinned sockets on a reference PCIe 5.0 card, where Windows-facing CSD and ACCEL personas plus on-card firmware turn a homemade die into a plug-and-play host peripheral.
If you are buying on this page, you are in the make chapter. An OEM or power user who completes the 57 pipeline and wants volume-manufacturable packaging plus a Windows card stack continues in the run chapter — browse WritePhi Devices (WPD) on the same store. Neither family requires the other to be useful alone; together they describe the full path from blank substrate to installed Windows accelerator.
Fulfillment: Instant download after checkout. SHA-256 checksum published for integrity verification.
Region: USA-only (nginx geoblocking enforced). International buyers: contact us for special licensing.
Currency: USD only. Sub-$10k via standard checkout (Stripe). Over $10k: Term Sheet financing available.
Support: crioneaka@outlook.com | Christopher Gabriel Brown, Inventor | 24-48hr response.
Chris's philosophy: Every design engineered by hand. If it's specced, it works. If it has limits, we say so.
© 2026 Christopher Gabriel Brown · cri-one.com · Patent-pending inventions


