Civilization Builder Orientation

From Open Source Ecology
Revision as of 09:07, 20 January 2026 by Marcin (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Future Fab Crash Course is our one-week Civilization Builder Orientation.

Future Fab Crash Course (FFCC): Role and Positioning

Purpose

The Future Fab Crash Course (FFCC) is a fully online, high-reach orientation program designed to:

  • Inspire participation in civilization-scale problem solving
  • Introduce systems-level thinking and open-source strategy
  • Filter for seriousness, discipline, and readiness
  • Route participants into appropriate next steps (Commons, CET, EFT, or exit)

FFCC is not a training program, certification, or enterprise accelerator. It is a large-scale sorting and alignment mechanism.

Comparison to Abundance 360

FFCC is comparable to Abundance 360 in *reach and inspiration*, but differs fundamentally in *function and rigor*.

Dimension Abundance 360 Future Fab Crash Course (FFCC)
Primary Goal Inspiration and optimism Inspiration + seriousness filtering
Core Mode Vision, networking, futurism Systems thinking under constraint
Accountability Low Moderate (mandatory written outputs)
Orientation Opportunity-focused Reality- and tradeoff-aware
Outcome Motivated audience Self-selected pathways
Advancement Informal Explicit routing into defined tracks

What FFCC Explicitly Does

  • Exposes participants to civilization-scale challenges (energy, housing, manufacturing, water, food)
  • Frames open source as a strategic necessity, not a moral preference
  • Requires structured thinking and documentation
  • Sets clear expectations about difficulty, effort, and limits
  • Filters out casual interest before entry into core programs

What FFCC Explicitly Does NOT Do

  • Teach fabrication or hands-on building
  • Certify skills or readiness
  • Guarantee advancement into any track
  • Provide access to staff, founders, or private channels
  • Promise income, enterprise success, or placement

Role in the Overall Program Stack

FFCC occupies the outermost serious entry point:

  1. Civilization Commons – observe, learn, support
  2. Future Fab Crash Course (FFCC) – inspire, educate, filter
  3. Civilization Engineering Track (CET) – rigorous systems engineering
  4. Enterprise Formation Track (EFT) – new enterprise execution
  5. Enterprise Advancement Track (EAT) – upgrading existing enterprises

Canonical Framing

FFCC is intentionally sobering rather than promotional.

Its purpose is to help participants answer: “Am I actually prepared for the rigor of civilization-scale building?”

Most participants should not advance — and that is a successful outcome.