Hi Gordon, Richard, Tesla ..
I think 'competition' can be a bit of a 'dirty' word when it comes to ventures like this.. All (or certainly most) people designing / creating new musical instruments, do so (I believe) for reasons other than money or competing.. It is in many cases a compulsion which verges on mental illness (obsessive compulsive disorder) driven by the desire to invent, and create something original and beautiful. All of us 'sufferers' of this 'disorder' depend on each other - our designs are evolutional progressions of what others have done, and there are occasional 'Eureka' moments when a real step 'forward' is realised.
Reality invades into this utopian world when survival is at risk - When inventors compete to capture a limited market, by putting each other down (as with theremin adverts where advertisers declare all circuits which do not contain inductors as 'sub-standard').. Or when (as with Moog vs Arp) some IP rights are violated - Such a shame! If Moog + Arp had got on with each other, they could have advanced analogue synthesis for everyone, and the market was big enough for both.. Instead they fought and the instruments suffered.
For me, I now do not believe my venture into Theremins was commercially sensible - And have realised that I took this path for PERSONAL rather than Commercial reasons - I wanted a Theremin which was easy to play, and sounded like a Mini-Moog! - I wanted to be able to play the Moog Lead on "lucky Man" on a Theremin.. And from this simple obsession my exploration of Theremins began.. Since then my position has swung towards the classical Theremin - I have grown to love the instrument as an instrument - not just as a control mechanism.
I dont want competition - in fact I would prefer to be invisible, designing for manufacturers or anyone who provides me with enough to feed my family and my obsessions! And I will happily share my ideas / knowledge etc with other developers - I personally think if a few of us worked together we could take Capacitive musical instruments to another level - and that doing so would increase the market hugely, giving space for us all to make a reasonable living while doing what we love.
But.. If the market got bigger, there would be greater chance that 'big business' would become interested - I watched this happen synthesis, when low cost plastic keyboard synths from Japan wiped out the British Analogue Synthesiser producers (I was working for Jeremy Lord Synthesisers, which changed to making medical products as Lord Medical, because there was a near total collapse in sales of the expensive Sky-Wave Synthesiser) .. Perhaps this is what makes Theremin Design / production attractive at present - the fact that it is one of the few remaining electronics 'cottage' industries.