Forgive me if this is the wrong newsgroup for this.
Has anybody every tried making/selling an "[anti]fuse programmable" printed circuit board?
The idea would be like Actel's antifuse-based FPGAs at a board scale: you have a mesh of wires connected by fuses (or antifuses). You destructively program the device by asserting high voltages on the appropriate wire pairs to break (make) connections through fuses (antifuses).
In the PCB situation you'd probably want all the fuses on the surface on one side of the board, and several layers of wiring (six?). The programming network would need two copper layers of its own (probably the fuse side and the layer beneath that).
If this actually worked, hobbyists would be able to make reasonably complex mulit-layer PCBs without an investment in machinery or having to deal with a third-party manufacturer. I guess the question is whether or not you can make and mount an array of that many [anti]fuses cheaply enough (or even somehow create them using the same expose/etch process used for the copper, but with a different material). Obviously it would also depend on the electrical quality of the blown antifuses (or unblown fuses) and how small/many you could make.
Anyways, either this is completely nuts, or else somebody's already done it. I suspect the former, but I figured people here would know which is the case.
Here's Actel's product, which is basically the same thing at VLSI scales:
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