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41 | GOOD UP TO THIS POINT - now need 2 minutes more. | 4 minutes | ... |
42 | LifeTrac in Turkey | , in Turkey, | |
43 | LifeTrac in LA with Daniel and Hayden | ...and another in the USA where 2 high school students, Daniel and Hayden, built a tractor for the South Central LA urban gardening project. | |
44 | Night light shot of LifeTrac 4 | Last year we have built LifeTrac 4, | |
45 | LifeTrac 5 and arugula lettuce | This year we build LifeTrac 5 which is now being used in a pilot project - in an urban gardening project in New Orleans. | |
46 | Glamor shot of LifeTrac 6 | We just completed LifeTrac 6 - such that with the LifeTrac 6, | |
47 | Glamor shot of Soil Pulverizer and Brick press | and the world's first open source soil pulverizer, and the world's first open source automated Compressed Earth Brick Press - we curled ou 2513 bricks to build the OSE Microhouse - | |
48 | 30 second sizzle reel of microhouse - heavy on the pulverizer grinding, dumping, bricks curling out, walls going up. Timelapses. | ||
49 | Open Source Hardware logo | Wow! I thought this was great. The open source industrial revolution is upon us! We're going to change the world. | |
50 | clip from "When you really think about it" up to "...and from local resources. How would that be?" | When you really think about it, all of the wealth that we enjoy today for a modern standard of living relies on rocks, soil, sunlight, plants, water...those are all abundant... What if we can survive and thrive, up to a modern standard of living... | |
51 | (stay on last image) | Open Source Ecology's mission is to create the open source economy - an economy that optimizes both production - and distribution. | |
52 | 80/20 slide | It is up to all of us here - to grow the open hardware movement - as a cornerstone of the open source economy. Whiel apps and software like Prezi are cool - 80% of the world economy is still and probably always will be based on material production.. | |
53 | The question remains - how do we scale an open development process to tap a large number of contributions without turning into chaos? | ||
54 | Dozuki platform slide from Dozuki page on wiki - http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Dozuki | To do this, we’re following the wikipedia model - a small core team managing a large number of worldwide contributions. We have just established our new platform on Dozuki slide - which uses an open source documentation format standard - and seeded all our 50 machines there. The key is to break the project down into bite-size chunks that allow developers to contribute without being overwhelmed by the huge scope of our project - of ‘creating civilization from scratch.’ Thus we are using module-based design - where we break each of the 50 machines into about 10 modules. Then we develop each machine at the module level. | |
55 | Number of contributions graph for Wikipedia | Further - each module goes through about a 100 specific steps (slide), which we track in a spreadsheet. Then each machine goes through about 3 prototypes. That’s a total of about 150,000 steps for the entire project. If we achieved the rate of development of Wikipedia - we would be done in 1/3 of a year. | |
56 | Video of machines in workshop at work | The challenge with scaling open hardware - compared to open source software - is the compiler problem. The compiler is that which converts instructions into product - in software - it is that which converts source code into working software - and in hardware - that which converts design blueprints - into physical objects. For hardware - the compiler is the tools of production. Yet most of the work of hardware development is creative content - ie, the blueprints - so there is hope that hardware development can scale. | |
57 | Using such techniques - last year on December 18 - we have achieved the above model of development - long design period and quick build - as we built our open source, automated CEB press in a single day - slide. | ||
58 | For the next 2 years - we are going into the Last Mile for the GVCS. Getting up to 1000 hours of development per week - to fill the necessary steps on developing all 50 machines. | ||
59 | Design Sprint image | Join us. Sign up to our Design Sprints - weekly remote development events on google hangouts. | |
60 | DPV - image of Hablab - s | Join us on site - for Dedicated Project Visits. We're currently planning to reach the 100 top engineering universities for summer students and independent study projects - to move the GVCS forward. We have space for 12 people, and intend to build it up to 24 by end of 2014. | |
61 | Or support us financially. Subscribe as a True Fan, get your company to give us matching donations - we just received our tax exempt status. | ||
62 | We are true to our crowd funding roots. | ||
63 | Idea whose time has come slide. | So anyway, let's buld a new world together. | |
64 | Contact info slide: marcin@opensourceecology.org for technical development, and website link, and dozuki link, and trovebox link | ||
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