MJ Dogfood Session: Difference between revisions
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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