Iguanaworks has closed and our products are no longer sold

(iguanaworks.net)

76 points | by ripe 5 hours ago ago

13 comments

  • rlam2x51 3 hours ago ago

    Home Assistant* introduced support for infrared a few days ago. Not sure if it would be a good idea to stay in business for a bit longer and see if the Home Assistant community boost the sales.

    I am personally interested in an IR Sender to make my old Hifi Setup smarter.

    * https://www.home-assistant.io/blog/2026/04/01/release-20264/

    • tclancy 3 hours ago ago

      Yes, same exact boat, I was just starting to think about looking for a small, cheap device in this space for HA.

      • rlam2x51 an hour ago ago

        Let me know if you find one! I wanted to wait for a few months to let the experienced smart homers pave the way.

  • Aurornis 3 hours ago ago

    Sad to see someone’s small business close, but these products are in a difficult position of being both extremely niche and very simple. Someone went to some effort to source a nice dongle enclosure and do some printing on it, but beyond that the hardware is something that anyone with a little PCB experience could replicate it in a day. I wouldn’t be surprised if these were just sourced from a generic manufacturer in China and they asked for custom printing.

    If there’s demand this would be a good project for someone to make and have ready to build PCBs you could order from OSH Park or even a fully project that you could have JLC build and populate.

    • analog31 39 minutes ago ago

      I have a tiny business that makes a gadget for musicians: Think something like an effects pedal. I publish my schematics, have shared PCB files, and even offer to give you some of the parts that are hard to get. A few people have built their own, and share their results in web forum threads about my product.

      Very few people have taken the bait. I think we techies over-estimate the ability and inclination of people to make something. Even most programmers don’t want to solder. They may still be technically inclined, but want to be involved at a higher level: Buying the basic stuff and using it as a basis for even more elaborate things.

      • charcircuit 31 minutes ago ago

        >I think we techies over-estimate the ability and inclination of people to make something.

        But that was never the worry. The worry is a competitor undercutting you because they do not have to recoup R&D.

    • antonvs 2 hours ago ago

      This company and product line launched nearly 20 years ago (2007) and doesn’t seem to have changed much since. That’s quite a long time for something like this. If the owners had wanted the business to continue (perhaps they didn’t), some diversification could have achieved that relatively easily.

  • aeonik 2 hours ago ago

    Well damn, I didn't know about this until now, and I could actually use one.

    Is there any alternative?

    • toast0 32 minutes ago ago

      I've had reasonable luck with microsoft's windows media center remote receivers and lirc. Although they don't all work the same. The first one I got was easier to use than later ones...

      And frustation with atsc 3 and the media landscape led to me abandoning my htpcs.

    • bookofjoe 17 minutes ago ago

      eBay

  • buckle8017 4 hours ago ago

    Presumably there just isn't that much use for that anymore.

    Most remotes seem to be RF not ir these days.

    • ovi256 3 hours ago ago

      Especially given the hardware has no moat and there are a zillion IR transceivers on Aliexpress. It's not a good market.

  • teddyh 3 hours ago ago

    I’m guessing that modern hardware are all controlled by privacy-invading apps, communicating via the company’s servers.