Open Source Ecology: Difference between revisions

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"Open Source Ecology is a nonprofit research and training center for ethical entrepreneurs."
"Open Source Ecology is a nonprofit research and training center for ethical entrepreneurs."


URL = http://www.sourceopen.org/wiki/?pagename=OpenSourceEcology.About
*Overview of Projects - [http://openfarmtech.org/index.php?title=Overview here].
 
*CEB Prototype done, blog - http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/?p=91
*OSE Product Cycle - http://openfarmtech.org/index.php?title=Main_Page#Deployment
*View our [http://openfarmtech.org/OSE_Proposal.doc 3 Year Proposal of 2008]
*Flickr pictures - http://www.flickr.com/photos/11113094@N03/
[http://socialsynergyweb.org/opensourceecology/content/ceb-prototype-1-fab-0  Social Synergy enterprise platform]
 
*See P2P Foundation review [http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/marcin-jakubowskis-open-farm-the-most-important-social-experiment-in-the-world/2008/01/22 of our work]
*Dave Pollard’s Environment Link of the Week, Feb. 9, 2008 - http://blogs.salon.com/0002007/2008/02/09.html#a2096
*[http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/proposed-ose-specifications-aim-to-guarantee-truly-open-physical-peer-production/2008/02/12 OSE Specifications]   
*Best propaganda yet, aligned with our Solar Turbine energy work: [http://www.internationalistmagazine.com/2007-earlyfall/2007-earlyfall_commentary.html]


It is also a method for developing neo-subsistence based communities, see [[OpenSourceEcology]]
It is also a method for developing neo-subsistence based communities, see [[OpenSourceEcology]]


=Description=
=Description=
taken from [http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/ http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/] :
'''How it all (could) work'''
February 12th, 2008 by Brittany
“When solar cell companies develop cheaper panels, then we’ll switch to solar power.”
Did you ever hear someone say this?
Instead of waiting around for solar panels to become affordable, why don’t we collaborate and make them ourselves.
By we, I mean anyone who’s interested in affordable, ecological energy production. We all have some kind of skill. What if we collaborated: networkers, designers, fundraisers, engineers from all walks of life, and came up with optimal, user-friendly, durable, inexpensive, and cheap to produce solar cells (or an even better alternative)?
And while we’re at it, why not optimize all the tools for sustainable and just living, while keeping them at an affordable price? Imagine if every town grew its own fuel, made its own bricks for building, and gathered energy from the sun for heat and power. These technologies do not have to be controlled by large, centralized entities. With a little collaboration, these tools can be at the fingertips of the world.
At Open Source Ecology we already started the process. Materials for the world’s first open source compressed earth block (soil brick) press prototype cost under $1500. Comparable machine cost over $25,000.


Real world-impacting products through world collaboration. People from Iceland, the Canary Islands, India, and elsewhere are working with us: Networking, designing reviewing designs, fund-raising, and field testing. People contribute because they know that everyone benefits when technologies and science are in the public domain. Furthermore, when everyone contributes, designs reflect the needs of people, rather than of corporate headquarters.


What it really takes to accomplish our Mission Statement is the creation of a parallel infrastructure for meeting human needs in a sustainable and regenerative way. To this end, the present system may be utilized as a working infrastructure onto which social enterprise can be superimposed as a critical component of meeting human needs in a sustainable economy. We believe that the route to such infrastructure includes: (1) open access to practical knowledge, (2), the collaborative development of working economic models via the nonprofit sector, and (3) education, demonstration, and training aimed at integrated, ecological, regenerative social enterprise. The process by which we attain the above is called Open Source Development, a collaborative, open process which builds on past knowledge and leverages public collaboration to create an Open Society."
Drop us an email, let us know what you think. Check out our website (openfarmtech.org) and pass along our information to interested networks, family, and friends.
(http://www.sourceopen.org/wiki/?pagename=OpenSourceEcology.About)


"We derive our name from an analogy between Ecology in nature and Open Source in society. Ecology in nature is the seamless workings and relationships between life forms and their environment. Open Source is analogous to Ecology in that the transparency and access inherent to Open Source thinking helps to promote a democratic society. Open source thinking tends to reduce competitive waste such as warfare over resources or deprivation from basic human needs. Open Source Ecology is the integration of the natural and societal ecologies that tends towards regenerative economics. We are convinced that a possibility of a quality life exists, where human needs are guaranteed to the world's entire population- as long as we ask ourselves basic questions on what societal structures and productive activities are truly appropriate to meeting human needs for all. The goal is to liberate our time to engage in exactly that which each of us wants to be doing- instead of what we need to do to survive. All people have the potential to thrive while regenerating their natural environments."
We look forward to hearing from you.





Revision as of 20:35, 13 February 2008

"Open Source Ecology is a nonprofit research and training center for ethical entrepreneurs."

  • Overview of Projects - here.

Social Synergy enterprise platform

It is also a method for developing neo-subsistence based communities, see OpenSourceEcology

Description

taken from http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/ : How it all (could) work February 12th, 2008 by Brittany

“When solar cell companies develop cheaper panels, then we’ll switch to solar power.”

Did you ever hear someone say this?

Instead of waiting around for solar panels to become affordable, why don’t we collaborate and make them ourselves.

By we, I mean anyone who’s interested in affordable, ecological energy production. We all have some kind of skill. What if we collaborated: networkers, designers, fundraisers, engineers from all walks of life, and came up with optimal, user-friendly, durable, inexpensive, and cheap to produce solar cells (or an even better alternative)?

And while we’re at it, why not optimize all the tools for sustainable and just living, while keeping them at an affordable price? Imagine if every town grew its own fuel, made its own bricks for building, and gathered energy from the sun for heat and power. These technologies do not have to be controlled by large, centralized entities. With a little collaboration, these tools can be at the fingertips of the world.

At Open Source Ecology we already started the process. Materials for the world’s first open source compressed earth block (soil brick) press prototype cost under $1500. Comparable machine cost over $25,000.

Real world-impacting products through world collaboration. People from Iceland, the Canary Islands, India, and elsewhere are working with us: Networking, designing reviewing designs, fund-raising, and field testing. People contribute because they know that everyone benefits when technologies and science are in the public domain. Furthermore, when everyone contributes, designs reflect the needs of people, rather than of corporate headquarters.

Drop us an email, let us know what you think. Check out our website (openfarmtech.org) and pass along our information to interested networks, family, and friends.

We look forward to hearing from you.


What is Open Source Economics?

"Our mission is to extend the Open Source model to the provision any goods and services- Open Source Economics. This means opening access to the information and technology which enables a different economic system to be realized, one based on the integration of natural ecology, social ecology, and industrial ecology. This economic system is based on open access- based on widely accessible information and associated access to productive capital- distributed into the hands of an increased number of people. We believe that a highly distributed, increasingly participatory model of production is the core of a democratic society, where stability is established naturally by the balance of human activity with sustainable extraction of natural resources. This is the opposite of the current mainstream of centralized economies, which have a structurally built-in tendency towards of overproduction."


More Information

Essay by at http://www.oekonux-conference.org/documentation/texts/Jakubowski.html