MJ Dogfood Session: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 27: Line 27:
Our current idea is to scale this method to remote collaboration sessions with 50 people online.
Our current idea is to scale this method to remote collaboration sessions with 50 people online.


=Tractor Modular Design=





Revision as of 11:23, 29 May 2013

Preparation:

Hi, my name is Marcin, founder of Open Source Ecology. I am working on the Global Village Construction Set (50 gvcs slide) - the set of the 50 Industrial Machines that it takes to build a small civilization with modern comforts. This is my second year of the Shuttleworth Fellowship. My best title would be something machine designer and Open Source Industrialist .

My goal is to create the open source economy - an economy based on open collaboration. While most people here operate in software and intangible goods, my work revolves around the 80% chunk of the economy that is the physical infrastructures of humanity - or material production - expressed through open hardware.

Why am I doing this?

O was born in Poland. When I was 7 years old – tanks rolled down my streets – and unfortunately, it wasn't a parade. I grew up behind the iron curtain in a state of martial law and material scarcity. My family and I waited in long lines for butter and meat. Then we fled to America, I got into Princeton and then finished a Ph.D. in plasma physics in 2003, and discovered- that I was useless. Also, I never stopped thinking about the terrible things that happen when resources are scarce and people fight over opportunity.

I said goodbye to my theoretical chalkboard and bought a farm in Missouri. I bought a tractor, then it broke - I paid to get it repaired, then it broke again - and pretty soon, I was broke - too.

That's when I turned to our roots of crowd funding. I blogged about all that I did, got subscribers and donors, and currently have about 500 True Fans supporting the project at $10 per month.

I built the first machine in 2008, and operated on a $1000/month budget until I was put on the world stage with TED in 2011. Since then, our budget has grown about 500% per year.

The first ever replication occurred in 2011 by a guy who quit his job as a programmer and built our brick press. In 2012, we have had over a dozen replications in 5 countries around the world.

2012 was a time of great growing pains, as I recognized the difference between vision and execution. Based on our meteoric rise, I proposed to Shuttleworth Foundation that I would finish the entire GVCS by the end of that year. They bought it hook line and sinker - not - and this year, I got a good spankin' as - Hail the King - is taking measures to make me more accountable to my promises.

Last year, we did - however, reach a major milestone. Our platform is Absolutely Efficient Production - Enabled by Open Source. Along these lines - we have achieved radical production efficiency of our machines. We build our automated, 1 ton, open source compressed earth brick press - in a single day.

Our goal for this year is to attain the same rate of production efficiency - but now on the design front. We would like to show to the world that it is possible to design a complete machine - in a single day. How? Via design sprints.

OSE Design Sprints - video.

Our current idea is to scale this method to remote collaboration sessions with 50 people online.


Tractor Modular Design

2013- 2015 Sell GVCS to Sustain FeF and OSE Evolve Documentation Platform Refine One Day Collaborative Design Refine One Day Production Runs Develop Curriculum for Fellow Immersion Training Ready Factor E Farm Missouri as first OSE Incubator 2016-17: Continue to Refinement GVCS Select 12 OSE Fellows for Immersive Training Each Fellows builds out 12 new OSE Incubators Each OSE incubator recruits 12 students each 2018-2019: Repeat Fellows cycle until there are 144 OSE Incubators around the world