Category:Manufacturing
Introductory Citations | |
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- Factory@Home report [1] |
- Jason F. McLennan [2] |
Visualization
Reto Stauss: The Open Manufacturing Value Stream
Overview | |
IntroductionPlease read:
This new section is dedicated to Open Manufacturing developments, making it easier to identify interests in creating physical objects. This is a smaller subset of our much broader section on Open and Shared Design Communities. However, this section also includes developments about 'production' and 'making' in general, including topics like the DIY revolution, the digitalization of crafts, and agricultural production. The P2P Foundation supports the aims of the Open Source Hardware and Design Alliance [3] , an initiative to foster sustainable sharing of open hardware and design. Have a look at the following material:
Video: Four Ways to Manufacture Open Hardware. How does open hardware get made? 1) Licensing; 2) Fulfillment; 3) Contract manufacturing; 4) DIY assembly [4] Comparative Tables
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The Personal Manufacturing IndustryFor details see: Personal Manufacturing Industry and Personal Manufacturing Machines Introduction: an overview of Personal Manufacturing Read:
ToolsSee: Personal Manufacturing Tools Typology of Personal Manufacturing Machines (Hardware)
Computer-Aided Design Software
Players
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Mappings and Typologies1. The integrated open design and manufacturing process, a poster by Thomas Lommee at http://www.intrastructures.net/yes_we_re_open.pdf
Key Resources
See also:
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Introductory Articles
Other essential articles/essays are:
Also:
Also:
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Contacts
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| Bryan Bishop | Kirsty Boyle | Charles Collis | Vinay Gupta | Eric Hunting | Marcin Jakubowski | |
| kanzure AT gmail DOT com | kirsty AT openmaterials DOT org | charles dot collis at gmail dot com | hexayurt AT gmail DOT com | erichunting AT gmail DOT com | joseph dot dolittle at gmail dot com | |
| Smári McCarthy | Massimo Menichinelli | Catarina Mota | Sam Rose | Chris Watkins | ||
| spm2 AT hi DOT is | info AT openp2pdesign DOT org | catarina AT openmaterials DOT org | samue.rose AT gmail DOT com | chriswaterguy AT appropedia.org |
Key people in the Open Hardware movement | |
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CitationsSee also our Citations on Open and Shared Design and Open and Distributed Manufacturing | |
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– Simon Bradshaw, Adrian Bowyer and Patrick Haufe [17]
- Jason F. McLennan [18] The Inevitability of Personal Manufacturing as new Industrial RevolutionAccording to Marshall Burns, previous emancipating technologies in human history were the book (enabled by the invention of the printing press), cars (enabled by new roads and gas stations) and now personal fabrication (enabled by 3D design software). What this random collection of technologies has in common is that they entered the lives of everyday people in a gradual way as the technology dropped in price, became easy to use, and accumulated a critical mass of applications, fellow users, or supportive infrastructure such as roads or high speed Internet. While mainstream adoption of personal manufacturing technologies is a few decades away, the manufacturing industry will experience the same forces that brought us YouTube, laptops, mobile phones and online retailers." - by Hod Lipson & Melba Kurman [19]
Why Localization is Inevitable in a Resource-scarce World"It is an article of faith that global trade will be an ever-growing presence in the world. Yet this belief rests on shaky foundations. Global trade depends on cheap, long-distance freight transportation. Freight costs will rise with climate change, the end of cheap oil, and policies to mitigate these two challenges. At first, the increase in freight costs will be bad news for developed and developing nations alike but, as adjustments in the patterns of trade occur, the result is likely to be decreased outsourcing with more manufacturing and food production jobs in North America and the European Union. The pattern of trade will change as increasing transportation costs outweigh traditional sources of comparative advantage, such as lower wages. The new geography of trade will not result from policy or treaties but from the impact of changing environmental conditions due to the growth of the human economy. ... Many goods will be manufactured closer to where they are consumed, as supply chains become more regional and local." - Fred Curtis, David Ehrenfeld [20]
Scale-Up From One"Scale up from one: Regular people and small manufacturing companies that lack investment capital will be able to set up low investment, “start small and scale up as it goes” businesses. Thanks to the low-cost Internet virtual storefronts, and the low cost of small-scale manufacturing for prototypes and custom goods, new companies can get started on a shoestring budget, yet sell their wares or services to niche, global marketplaces." - Hod Lipson & Melba Kurman [21]
Sam Rose, Erik deBruijn, Suresh Fernando on basic properties of scalable open source technology projectsbasic properties of scalable open source technology projects
(distilled from discussion between Erik deBruijn, Sam Rose, Suresh Fernando) - Sam Rose (Based on discussions with Erik deBruijn and Suresh Fernando via skype early 2010 http://wagn.holocene.cc/wagn/basic_properties_of_scalable_open_source_technology_projects ) So, what can we do to prevent instability? The solution isn't to formulate vague contingency plans or return to passive optimism. Obviously, that won't work. No, the solution is to improve our resilience to these systemic shocks through a social and economic transition that follows this simple formula: Localize production. Virtualize everything else. - John Robb [22] "The emergence of commons-based techniques — particularly, of an open innovation platform that can incorporate farmers and local agronomists from around the world into the development and feedback process through networked collaboration platforms—promises the most likely avenue to achieve research oriented toward increased food security in the developing world. It promises a mechanism of development that will not increase the relative weight and control of a small number of commercial firms that specialize in agricultural production. It will instead release the products of innovation into a self-binding commons—one that is institutionally designed to defend itself against appropriation. It promises an iterative collaboration platform that would be able to collect environmental and local feedback in the way that a free software development project collects bug reports—through a continuous process of networked conversation among the user-innovators themselves." - Yochai Benkler ([23], p. 22)
- Robert Theobald, The Guaranteed Income, 1966 |
Karim Lakhani on Communities driving Manufacturers out of the design phase"for any given company - there are more people outside the company that have smarts about a particular technology or a particular use situation then all the R&D engineers combined. So a community around a product category may have more smart people working on the product then the firm it self. So in the end manufacturers may end up doing what they are supposed to - manufacture - and the design activity might move to the edge and into the community." (http://www.futureofcommunities.com/2007/03/25/communities-driving-manufacturers-out-of-the-design-space/)
Kevin Kelly and Terry Hancock on nearly-free material production"Material industries are finding that the costs of duplication near zero, so they too will behave like digital copies. Maps just crossed that threshold. Genetics is about to. Gadgets and small appliances (like cell phones) are sliding that way. Pharmaceuticals are already there, but they don't want anyone to know. It costs nothing to make a pill." (http://www.kk.org/thetechnium/archives/2008/01/better_than_fre.php)
Steve Bosserman outlines what is most appropriate for local distributed manufacturing"strong candidates for a locally distributed manufacturing approach include ANYTHING that is agriculturally- based like food, feed, fiber, and biofuel production, much of housing and building construction including the manufacturing of inputs used in that industry, localized electric power generation using non-bio sources like wind, solar, and geothermal, and production / manufacturing of materials, components, and assemblies that use locally sourced raw materials and draw upon open-source, relatively easy to learn, appropriate technologies that can be applied in a wide range of situations-- not just a single product."
Eric von Hippel on Manufacturing around User Innovation Communities"Threadless has tapped into a fundamental economic shift, a movement away from passive consumerism. One day in the not-too-distant future citizen inventors using computer design programs and three-dimensional printers will exchange physical prototypes in much the same way Nickell and cohorts played Photoshop tennis. Eventually, Threadless-like communities could form around industries as diverse as semiconductors, auto parts, and toys. Threadless is one of the first firms to systematically mine a community for designs, but everything is moving in this direction. He foresees research labs and product-design divisions at manufacturing companies being outstripped by an "innovation commons" made up of tinkerers, hackers, and other devout customers freely sharing their ideas. The companies that win will be the ones that listen." (quotes and paraphrased by Inc. [25])
Frank Piller on User Manufacturing"User manufacturing is enabled by three main technologies: (1) Easy-to-operate design software that allows users to transfer their ideas into a design. (2) Design repositories where users upload, search, and share designs with other users. This allows a community of loosely connected users to develop a large range of applications. (3) Easy-to-access flexible manufacturing technology. New rapid manufacturing technologies ("fabbing") finally deliver the dream of translating any 3-D data files into physical products -- even in you living room. Combining this technology with recent web technologies can open a radical new way to provide custom products along the entire "long tail" of demand. User manufacturing builds on the notion that users are not just able to configure a good within the given solution space (mass customization), but also to develop such a solution space by their own and utilize it by producing custom products. As a result, customers are becoming not only co-designers, but also manufacturers, using an infrastructure provided by some specialized companies." (http://mass-customization.blogs.com/mass_customization_open_i/2007/11/webinar-the-nex.html)
Jeff Bezos on User-Manufacturing Everything"Before long, “user-generated content” won’t refer only to media, but to just about anything: user-generated jeans, user-generated sports cars, user-generated breakfast meals. This is because setting up a company that designs, makes and globally sells physical products could become almost as easy as starting a blog - and the repercussions would be earthshaking. " (http://www.usatoday.com/tech/columnist/kevinmaney/2006-11-21-amazon-user-generated-products_x.htm)
Flexible Manufacturing and the Maker Movement"Two future forces, one mostly social, one mostly technological, are intersecting to transform how goods, services, and experiences— the “stuff” of our world—will be designed, manufactured, and distributed over the next decade. An emerging do-it-yourself culture of “makers” is boldly voiding warranties to tweak, hack, and customize the products they buy. And what they can’t purchase, they build from scratch. Meanwhile, flexible manufacturing technologies on the horizon will change fabrication from massive and centralized to lightweight and ad hoc. These trends sit atop a platform of grassroots economics—new market structures developing online that embody a shift from stores and sales to communities and connections." (http://iftf.org/node/1766) |
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Information ResourcesBlogsA comprehensive list of Fabrication Media is kept by the Fab Wiki [26] A selection:
See also: BooksGeneral
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Technical
Community and Discussion Sources
See also:
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CompaniesSelection from the List of Open Hardware Organizations from GOSH 2009
Conferences and Events
ExamplesSee Product Hacking for our comprehensive open hardware and manufacturing directory
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Organizations
Podcasts
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Tools
Open Source Production MachinesFull list is updated here: [34]
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Webcasts
Documentaries:
Practical:
Also: (A to D only, ported from our Webcasts directory)
Material on Specialized IndustriesFrom the Industrial Cooperation Project:
See the following tags:
The special case of the fashion industry
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Open Manufacturing Encyclopedia
Pages in category "Manufacturing"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 1,774 total.
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- Paul Zee
- Peak Metals
- Pearce Research Group at Michigan Tech in Open Sustainability Technology
- Pearl Biotech
- Pearl Gel Box
- Peer Production and Desktop Manufacturing in the Case of the Helix T Wind Turbine Project
- Peer Production and Industrial Cooperation in Alternative Energy
- Peer Production and Industrial Cooperation in Biotechnology, Genomics and Proteomics
- Peer Production and Industrial Cooperation in Telecommunications
- Peer Production Entrepreneurs
- Peer to Peer Thing Tracking
- Periodization of Technological History
- Permafacture
- Permafacture Institute
- Permaneering Design Principles
- Permatechie
- Personal Circuit Makers
- Personal Design Manifesto
- Personal Fabrication
- Personal Fabricators
- Personal Factory
- Personal Manufacturing
- Personal Manufacturing - Business Models
- Personal Manufacturing - Discussion
- Personal Manufacturing Companies
- Personal Manufacturing in Education
- Personal Manufacturing Industry
- Personal Manufacturing Machine Makers
- Personal Manufacturing Machines
- Personal Manufacturing Tools
- Personal Robotics
- Personal Scale PCB Milling Machines
- Peter Semmelhack
- Peter Semmelhack on Open Source Hardware in Electronics
- PhD into Consumer Created Designs
- Phil Torrone and Limor Fried on the Maker Movement
- Philip Steffan on Personal Fabrication
- PhoneBloks
- Phonebloks Modular Phone
- Physibles
- Physical Design
- Physical Internet
- Physical Markup Language
- Physically Producing Open Designs
- Pieter van Boheemen
- Piracy as a Common Business Model for Fashion Design
- Plasma Cutting
- Pocket Factories
- Podcasts on Open Design and Distributed Manufacturing
- Policies for a Transnational Commons Economy
- Policies for Digital Fabrication
- Policies for FabLabs
- Policies To Support Local Manufacturing
- Political Economy of Distributed Manufacturing
- Ponoko
- Portable Open Source 3D Printer
- Post Industrial Manufacturing Research Projects
- Post-Couture Collective
- Post-Scarcity Economy
- Potential of Open Design for Eco-Efficient Product Development
- Power Cube
- Pragmatic Critique of the Peer Production License
- Precious Plastic
- Precious Plastics
- Print On Demand
- Print To Peer
- PrintHuman Community
- Pro-Ams as a Force for Social and Commercial Innovation
- Process Specification Language
- Producing Industrial Goods Through the Commons
- Product Hacking
- Product Open Data
- Product-Centered Business Supply Chain Development vs People-Centered Business Network Ecosystem Development
- Production and Governance in Hackerspaces
- Production and Governance in Hackerspaces as Commons-Based Peer Production in the Physical Realm?
- Production Commons
- Production Network Effects
- Production Principles and Production Revolutions
- Production Revolution
- Production Sharing
- Products and Projects based on Open Design
- Project Ara
- Project Splinescan
- Proposal for an Alliance between the Social Economy and Free Libre and Open Source Software
- Proposals to Support the Emerging Maker Economy
- Protei
- Protoforge
- Protoprint
- Prototyping Toolkits
- Prusa Research
- Public Patents
- Pwdr
R
- R84 Multifactory Mantova
- Radical Cross Stitch
- Radical Redesign of Business
- Rafi Haladjian on the Internet of Things
- Rainhard Prügl on Toolkits and Communities
- Ralf Lippold
- Rally Fighter
- Rapid Manufacturing
- Rapid Prototyping
- Rapid Tooling
- Raspberry Pi
- Raven
- Re Purpose
- Re-Politicising Participatory Design in the Fairphone Project
- Ready to Share
- Rebuilding the UK Textile Industry as a Commons
- Recommended Open Hardware Licenses
- Recursive Manufacture
- Recyclebot
- Red de Evolución Colaborativa
- Redistributed Manufacturing
- Refarm the City
- Refugee Open Cities
- Refugee Open Ware
- Regenerative Supply Webs
- ReMade
- ReMaker Society
- Remakery
- Renewable Matter
- Rep Straps
- Repair and Service Center in Vienna
- Repair Cafe
- Repair Coalition
- RepLab
- Replication
- Replication Machinery
- Replicator
- Replicators
- RepRap
- RepRap Research Foundation
- Reproducing Wealth Through 3D Printers
- RepTab
- Repurpose
- Research on Modularity Production Network
- Research on the Adoption of the Maker Identity in a Small-Town Hackerspace
- Research on the Maker Movement
- Resilient Manufacturing
- Resource-Based Economy
- Restart Project
- Retail Cooperatives for Minipreneurs
- Reto Wettach
- Reversing the Trend of Large Scale and Centralization in Manufacturing
- Ricardo Domínguez on Open Fabbing
- Right to Repair
- Riversimple
- Roadmap for Additive Manufacturing
- Roberto Verzola on Undermining vs. Developing Abundance
- Robohand
- Robotic Fabricator
- Roboy
- Role of Metadata and the Blockchain in Open Supply Chains for Distributed Manufacturing
- Role of Open Methods in the Development of the First Airplane
- Romotive
- Ruth Potts on the New Materialism
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- Sabina Barcucci
- Salinas Cooperative - Ecuador
- Scale for the Measurement of Distributed Manufacturing
- Scale Up From One
- School Factory
- SciComp Homebrew Club
- Scientific Foundation for Open and Co-Creative Production
- Scott Constable on the Deep Craft Ethos and Manifesto
- Sean Moss-Pultz on Open Moko
- Sean Wellesley-Miller on the Home as a Productive Ecosystem
- Second Scientific Revolution as the Penetration of Science into All Forms of Production
- Seed Factory
- Selective Laser Sintering
- Self-Assembly
- Self-Assembly Lab
- Semantic Models for Internet Supply Chain Collaboration
- Sensorica
- Sewing Cafes
- Sewing Rebellion
- Shanzai Culture
- Shanzhai
- Shanzhai Electric Cars
- Shapeways
- Shaping Things
- Shared Artisan Studio
- Shared Machine Shops
- Shared Warehouse
- Sharon Ede on Cosmo-Localisation
- Shift FabLab Documentary
- Shifting to a Sustainable Manufacturing Culture in Australia
- Shop Bot
- Siftables
- Simone Cicero on the Open Source Hardware Documentation Jam
- SKDB
- SketchChair
- Slic3r
- Slowd
- Smart Machines and Service Work
- Smári McCarthy on the Failures of the Materials Economy and How We Fix Them
- Social Innovation and Design For Sustainability
- Social Manufacturing
- Social Manufacturing Platforms
- Social Technology Network - Brazil
