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OSHUG #14 - Open for Change Pt. 2 (Hexayurt, O + S Project, Onawi)Thursday, November 24, 2011 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM (GMT)London, United Kingdom |
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Event Details
Open Source Hardware User Group
Event #14
Open for Change Part 2
(Hexayurt, O + S Project, Onawi)
Back in May at OSHUG #10 we heard about three projects concerned with effecting positive change. At the fourteenth OSHUG meeting we'll be continuing with this theme, and hearing about the Hexayurt disaster relief shelter, documenting Appropriate Technology for the needs of others, and open renewables.
Free and Open Source Housing
The Hexayurt is an award-winning replacement for the disaster relief tent which provides shelter at 20% the cost of a tent. It is designed to be manufactured anywhere in the world at any scale, from local materials, as Free hardware, to house humans in need. The Hexayurt Project maintains the designs and makes them freely available. An estimated $250,000 worth of Hexayurts were built at Burning Man this year.
Vinay Gupta is one the world’s leading thinkers on infrastructure theory, state failure solutions, and managing global system risks including poverty/development and the environmental crisis. He works at both the theoretical level, building models and mapping tools and at the practical level, as the designer of the Hexayurt, he helped start the US National Defense University STAR-TIDES program on humanitarian assistance, consulted on urban resilience for Arup, and is an associate fellow of the UCL Institute for Security and Resilience Studies.
The Needs of Others
One of the areas seeing heavy influence from the Free and Open Source Software (F/OSS) movement is Appropriate Technology, and the O+S Project is working from the perspective of its documentation. It is investigating the difficulty in translating from F/OSS to Appropriate Technology at both a practices and principles level, and how we must go further to meet the goals with the world’s poorest people.
Al Razi Masri is a recent Manufacturing Engineering graduate and founder of the O+S Project. In addition to which he is working on documentation for the Hexayurt Project and instructional documents for other Appropriate Technology.
Open Hardware and Renewable Energy
Onawi is a non-profit organisation promoting open hardware for the development of non-domestic wind energy systems. Open hardware is becoming increasingly popular, as we can see in the recent initiative by Facebook to open up the technology behind their data-centres. However, most open hardware projects are targeted at hobbyists or those looking for custom do-it-yourself alternatives to mass market products. While this is a very positive aspect, at Onawi we believe that open licensing and collaborative development could have a far reaching impact on industrial production. In particular, Open Hardware could provide the horizontal technology transfer of renewables required to fight climate change in developing countries.
Javier Auiz is a UK based digital activist and social entrepreneur promoting open data, open standards and open licensing as the basis for a better future based on transparency, participation and collaboration. His practical work cuts across various spheres ranging from citizen journalism, archives to renewable energy. His background is in anthropology and technology management, and you can normally find him at the Open Rights Group.
Note: Please aim to arrive for 18:00 - 18:15 as the talks will start at 18:30 prompt!
When & Where
The Centre for Creative Collaboration
16 Acton Street
WC1X 9NG London
United Kingdom
Thursday, November 24, 2011 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM (GMT)
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Hosted By
OSHUG, SK Pang and C4CC
A group of people with an interest in open source hardware, we hold regular meetings in and around London.
SK Pang Electronics is a supplier of electronic components and modules, and designs and manufactures open source hardware. Customers include hobbyists and enthusiasts, and professional users and educational establishments in the UK and around the world.
Centre for Creative Collaboration
A neutral place where people from many different backgrounds - universities, large corporates, SMEs, freelancers - can work together on new things in the belief that real innovation happens at the edge and in the gaps between disciplines.