Factor E Farm Blog Building tools for replicable, open source, post-scarcity resilient communities 2011-12-12T21:45:46Z http://blog.opensourceecology.org/feed/atom/ WordPress Brianna <![CDATA[Ironworker Blade Design Help]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3756 2011-12-12T21:45:46Z 2011-12-12T05:01:02Z For those of you who do not know, I’ve been hard at work on the design of the open source Ironworker Prototype II and plan on building it this winter at my grandfather’s fabrication shop, Enniss Inc. I’m calling out to fellow fabricators and engineers to help with the Ironworker design, so we can place the design of this very important tool into the repository of common knowledge. For those of you not familiar with the importance of an ironworker machine – it is the heart of any custom metal fabrication shop – a shop that can build any of the mechanical devices of the Global Village Construction Set.

This prototype will be the second version of the Ironworker. As well as having the 120T punch, this prototype will be able to shear 1”x12” flat and 6”x6”x1/2” angle steel. There will be a “tool cavity,” a space below the punching arm to which many accessory tools can attach. This will enable the machine to not only have the features above, but also attachments like brakes, notchers, and rod shears.

Scotchman 120T Ironworker

Scotchman 120T Ironworker

I had another design nearly developed using a vertical shear, but trashed it when I realized how much better it could be with optional attachments. And now, I’m stuck.

The first design version (1.0) of Prototype II

I need help designing the lower arm and flat shear. Because the cylinder will be attaching to both the upper and lower arms, the simplest way for the blade to cut will be angularly, meaning it will be rotating about the pin. For an angular cut, I’ll need to know:

  • How much force is necessary for this capacity
  • What angle the blade will enter and leave the steel
  • Where the blade will need to be vertically on the lower arm with relation to the cutting table.
  • How thick the blade needs to be

One solution would be to find another ironworker and reverse-engineer the shear. If I can get the dimensions of the shearing arm on another 120 ton ironworker, I can derive the necessary force for shearing 1” x 12”, and imitate the blade placement.

The other option would be to find the necessary force and force placement via CAE analysis. If it helps, I know that it requires 120T applied vertically with a 6° blade rake to shear the 1”x12”.

The last thing I need is to know the necessary blade thickness.  If I find the thickness for the flat shear or angle blade, we will build our own blades by machining tool steel and getting it professionally hardened. If we can’t find the info, we will have to buy the blades and then copy them for a future prototype.  We have smaller capacity ironworkers at my grandfather’s shop, with a 1”x6” capacity, and 2 like this both have .75” thick blades. I’m not sure if the thickness would increase or not for a 12” cut.

My basic design will be done soon after I get this information, and then we will have it analyzed with CAE to make sure it will work.  My goal is to be able to start fabricating it by Christmas, with the prototype completed and documented by the end of January.

If any readers have access to another 120T ironworker, any of the blades, or know someone capable of doing the computer analysis, please contact me: Brianna (at) kufadesigns (dot) com. Also, if you have any good design ideas, don’t be afraid to contribute on the wiki page.

Worst case scenario, if I can’t find this info, I can make the blade move vertically, but this would require much more steel and a more complicated design, so this should be avoided if possible.

Thanks for your help,

Brianna Kufa

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Civilization Starter Kit DVD – Table of Contents]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3734 2011-12-11T06:59:36Z 2011-12-11T05:38:33Z Dear collaborators – I am proud to announce the table of contents (ToC) of the Civilization Starter Kit DVD v0.01 – the 2011 Christmas Gift to the World from Open Source Ecology. This is the Civilization Starter Kit DVD that I mentioned first in my my TED Talk on the Global Village Construction Set. It will be published in its initial version (documenting 4 of the 50 machines) and locked down on the wiki by 8 PM GMT-6 on December 24, 2011. Ladies and gentlemen, on Dec. 24 – we will be 1% there. Burned DVDs will be made available for shipping the day after or as soon as possible, and will be shipped to respective Kickstarter supporters. The entire contents will be downloadable freely under the OSE License for Distributive Economics (to be updated and published), and we will also make copies available for sale as a fundraiser.

I’d like to express the intentions of publishing what is meant to become one of the most important publications of this decade – and I am inviting as many of you to participate in this creation as possible. We have 2 weeks left. We are calling out for the Factor e Farm Winter Farm-Out:  crowd sourcing assistance from all over the world on the numerous tasks left.

The core deliverable is the 4 core machines as described in the Kickstarter – plans, instructionals, and construction results. The Factor e Team is working on this – from CAD to builds to instructionals. We will provide as many supporting extras as possible – analyses, modeling, videos, econbomic analysis, enterprise models, house plans, additional prototype designs, and more – depending  upon the results of the Factor e Farm-Out.

The ToC shows the extent of the first DVD release – at least 1000 human hours of work still needed to be compiled the wealth of designs, instructionals, and techniques. We currently have 5 people on site at Factor e Farm working on it, with 3 additional people doing construction. This is an active call to recruit at least 6 more for the next 2 weeks. We rented a house in town to assist in this process, as our housing is still missing a roof. If you are in the Kansas City area, please come on down to help us lay brick for a day or more – we are doing so under the roof of the workshop – rain, snow, or shine. Interestingly – one can still lay brick in subzero weather – if you use antifreeze to bond bricks. Next week, it will be highs in the 40s, so it’s relatively comfortable.

The scope of the DVD is not only a report of the 4 machines in the construction part of the tool kit – tractor, CEB press, soil pulverizer, and Power Cube – but also to collate all prototype results to date. This is intended to be a comprehensive report of up-to-date results. This includes construction techniques and results.

To help, please review the ToC for perspective, or go straight to the priority Task List. This is a dynamic list that will be updated constantly until Dec. 24.  The task list shows status and further details. Please review the tasks, offer your assistance, or pass this on to capable friends. Please tweet and blog this. We have funding that will be allocated if we can not find qualified volunteers. The tasks are varied – from further prototyping, documentation, architecture,  video, graphics, technical writing, organizing, planning, engineering, analysis, calculations, simulations, diagrams, refactoring, publishing, editing – you name it.

The DVD will be as good as the generosity of all the contributors in this mini Apollo program for the GVCS. If you contribute, you will be one of the Civilization Starter Kit DVD authors, acknowledged in the credits. History unfolds.

Here are the top 11 tasks that we need help with. Contact me at opensourceecology at gmail dot com to help.

  1. Mike Apostol is working on the full professional CAD of the 4 machines.  See status, and then check out the needs and requests. Approximately 100 hours of assemblies and parts need to be turned into technical drawings on the CEB and Pulverizer. There are more for the tractor and Power Cube. Contact Mike Apostol to take on some of these drawings – mike.apostol at gmail dot com
    1. CEB has 28 assembly/weldment drawings and about 75 piece part drawings
    2. Pulverizer – 5 assemblies/weldments and 30 piece parts
  2. SnapLock CNC Circuit Mill – We have etched improved solenoid controller boards for the CEB press with hit-and-miss success. We want to build the CNC Circuit Mill to help us mill these reliably, where the circuit mill does both the paths and through-holes. The only proven and reliable open source CNC circuit mill that we know of is SnapLock. If you have built one or know someone that has – we are interested in visiting with that person for a dedicated visit where we prepare everything beforehand, and do a build-out in a weekend. This could be me traveling for a visit, or someone coming to Factor e Farm for a brief Dedicated Project Visit. Email me if you can help on this.
  3. Lead Editor for DVD – compiling content, editing, managing contributors. Managing fabrication procedure writing.
  4. DVD production – interface design and DVD burn
  5. Indexing of YouTube videos on my channel. Remote video editing can be done – CEB Construction, CEB fabrication, Power Cube fabrication, tractor fabrication, solenoid driver fabrication, soil pulverizer fabrication, and others. Contact me if you can write a script from existing documentation.
  6. Product Ecology model animation explaining entire set
  7. Product Ecology model animation explaining construction part of tool set
  8. Architectural drawings for workshop and living unit, and model 40 square meter microhouse
  9. Embodied energy calculations of construction process
  10. CAE analysis on critical components of the 4 machines
  11. Product manual production for 4 machines. Techical writing. Includes repair and troubleshooting, disassembly videos.

This is a start – let’s get going.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[LifeTrac Design Challenge: Live at GrabCAD]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3719 2011-12-09T05:30:15Z 2011-12-09T05:14:10Z The LifeTrac Design Challenge is now live at GrabCAD:

Pass this on to any engineer friends. This is our first attempt to solve a technical issue by means of a crowd engineering platform. I am hoping that this platform will be a significant contributor to the Global Village Construction Set (GVCS) development effort. We will gain xperience from this first challenge, and we have already discussed with GrabCAD – on how to organize a real event where engineers are invited to a  to weekend dedicated to producing a real GVCS design.

See GrabCAD’s blog about this campaign.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[$100k from The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3705 2011-12-10T18:31:22Z 2011-12-08T00:05:01Z We have just received a $100k award letter from The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. This means significant acceleration of prototype deployment of the Global Village Construction Set – making open blueprints accessible to everybody. Terra Foundation is our fiscal sponsor for the nonprofit sector.

 

With additional resources coming in, this is turning out to be a winter convergence at Factor e Farm as we prepare the OSE Christmas Gift to the WorldJames Slade is already here taking the tractor apart and making improvements:



We have more people descending onto Factor e Farm to work and publish. Luke Eisman and Jason Aramburu, CEO and CTO of Re:Char,will be joining us for initial documentation of existing OSE CNC Torch Table work. He has already replicated the OSE torch table rail drive system, I just found out. Our current direction is to replicate a DIY table from another fellow in Texas, a tested system that does production work. This has hundreds of hours of development, including automatic height control and a 3/8″x4″ main rail – making this robust enough for use as a router table. It was already used to cut out the hopper for James’ CEB press:

Our strategy is to familiarize ourselves with the above as a device with industry standard components, and then proceed quickly to opensource the stepper motors, height control, controllers, and document milling of gear rack as we develop the open source CNC Multimachine. As you can see, the above machine meets our criterion of simple design. Our goal is $2k for a 6×10 foot machine  comparable to industry standards costing about $40k. This requires toolchain integration of toolpath g-code generation and use with an open source CAM package such as LinuxCNC. Our last experience with the tool chain was messy, so if you are a Python programmer, help us integrate existing modules into a killer Open Source CNC Torch Table Control Software package. See previous work here and referring page here. Considerations include height control feedback integration, piercing strategy, and tool width corrections.

On the open hardware front, help us to develop open source stepper motors, open source stepper motor controllers equivalent in power-handling ability to Gecko G540 drives, and a height sensor mechanism. Then, help us develop a procedure for milling our own gear rack and pinion.

This will be followed by reducing the price further to about $500 for the CNC Torch Table after we melt our own steel with an open source induction furnace. The ergonomics of production are to be explored carefully to determine whether this deep level of technological recursion will also be economically significant.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[OSE Christmas Gift to the World: Civilization Starter Kit DVD v0.01]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3701 2011-12-10T18:54:56Z 2011-12-06T03:10:28Z Dear True Fans, Supporters, and Backers – here is an update on December 5, 2011.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[LifeTrac Design Challenge]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3674 2011-12-06T03:11:54Z 2011-12-03T20:19:56Z The LifeTrac open source Tractor is our weak link in the OSE Christmas Gift to the World for 2011. As we prepare to publish the Civilization Starter Kit DVD v0.01, we will include a Beta release of Prototype IV of LifeTrac, and Full Product Release of The Liberator open source CEB press, Soil Pulverizer, and Power Cube. We have gone trough 3 prototypes of LifeTrac at Factor e Farm, and we need to go to Prototype IV to address the outstanding wheel drive issues and loader balance corrections.

On the wheel drive, we are now working on quick release wheels –  where a cam mechanism and 1-2 bolts allow you to take off entire wheel assemblies on LifeTrac – in under 5 minutes. This is a great step forward on LifeTrac’s direction as the world’s first life-size Lego tractor. We have already shown quick interchange power units,  design-for-disasssembly (bolt-togeter) construction, interchangeability of motors, and quick-connect implements.

The concept design is a monolitic assembly with motor, bearings, and shaft – that can be taken right off the existing frame – by loosening a bolt and releasing a cam lock:

This simplifies the former miunting method. where 3 mounting plates were attached to individual frame members by using 6 bolts:

As we build this, we will use higher-torque, splined shaft motors in Prototype IV to address the failing coupler issue on the former keyed motors.

Moreover, we are addressing weight distribution issues for the LifeTrac loader arms. We are bending them to get the loader closer to the tractor body. We found in field testing that the tractor would begin to tip with  about 1500 lb of load on the front loader. As we now have over 150 3000 lb pallets full of compressed earth bricks, we will need to move them – and we want to do it with LifeTrac IV. Here is modeling of height reach after modification:

To obtain assistance on this problem, we are hosting a Design Challenge for LifeTrac (see problem statement and solution wiki page) by partnering withGrabCAD - a crowd-source, open engineering design platform. I found about GrabCAD through our successful Kickstarter campaign. Hardi Meybaum, GrabCAD CEO, was one our Kickstarter backers. We appear to be on the same page with respect to the potential of open engineering for addressing pressing world issues, so I have much hope in an evolving partnership within the context of rapid development of the GVCS 50 by year-end 2012.

More news on the GrabCAD Design Challenge is forthcoming. This will be our first experiment of true crowd design. The problem is well-defined and simple – but the solution will require some serious engineering to make it practical. As a reward, we are considering admission to our Build Naturally Workshop next year – which we are hosting as part of our Kickstarter reward structure. This includes admission to a one-day Natural Building workshop at Factor e Farm in 2011 + DVD documenting the natural construction with CEB, Straw, and Lumber, including modular house and workshop designs that can be adapted based on our designs. Includes hands-on experience: brick laying with CEBs and square bale insulation; assisting with lumber production with the Dimensional Sawmill, and square bale making with the Baler.

Regarding the solution path for the LifeTrac quick connect wheels – we will prototype the monolithic assembly here, with the splined motors – before the 24th of December – as the parallel design challenge progresses on GrabCAD. Mike Apostol is doing the CAD modeling here, and James Slade will do the build in our new workshop, which is now closed in, while Ian Midgley continues to document.

The working concept is:

  • Bolt with cam around bolt, where cam is locked in by a lever. and tightening the bolt both fixes the lever and pinches the frame tubing
  • Cam has a handle running parallel to the shaft when unlocked, and parallel to frame members when locked. Cam handle is welded directly to cam.
  • A second bolt towards middle of assembly pinches the assembly around tubular frame members
  • A peg (see concept drawing) fixes the assembly in place on the frame. Note that the cam and bolt can be integrated into one, not shown on concept drawing. The second bolt is also not shown in the concept drawing
  • Cam concept (top view, bolt head not shown):

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Dear True Fans and Supporters: Emergence]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3660 2011-11-29T19:09:56Z 2011-11-29T18:35:15Z Dear True Fans Backers, and Supporters,

I finally have a chance to emerge from full construction duty – 17,000 bricks pressed and countdown in our last week of brick pressing with cold weather producing diminishing returns. With Floyd recruited as our new construction manager, the building program is now in good hands, and I can focus on documentation and delivery of the OSE Christmas Gift to the World.

On the construction front, the roofs will go on first on both the workshop and living units. We will then build CEB columns around temporary posts. Then we can fill walls and work free from rain – and upon external walls being laid – we will do finishing work free from the cold.

With this program, we will therefore still be able to deliver on double CEB walls with strawbale­ insulation, at least some CEB floors if we can press any bricks this week, and the roof will still be straw bale insulated. It will take us into January as we do finishing work on the workshop and living units, and we aim to move in early January. We hope that the overall results is a showcase.

The CEB Press/Pulverizer/Power Cube have been taken through intense field testing of hundreds of hours, and we aim to get the tractor back to full functionality by Christmas, so that we can use it in some of the last phases of construction. The tractor had issues, and we are currently resolving them. On the CEB press, we are working on a simplified controller board which does not require the Arduino breakout board of the last design. On other ancillary technologies from the Global Village Construction Set – we will have our Prototype 1 of the gasifier heater with heat exchanger designed by Dec. 21 (currently in design stage). We did initial testing on Prototype 1 of the loader-mounted cement mixer – with unsatisfactory results – so we will test the soil pulverizer in mixing lime/cement for DIY cinder blocks. We have the first prototype of the Dimensional Sawmill 75% complete.

The tractor is our weak point, but we are recovering from that with a plan. As we address the failing wheel coupler issue, we will use this as an opportunity to deliver major improvements:

  1. Build a quick attach wheel system to allow full interchangeability of integrated wheel units (wheel, motor, bearings, shaft, and associated structure) – to deliver on the promise of a complete, life-size Lego Set tractor. This means that it will be possible to take off and replace the wheel units in about 5 minutes, with a single bolt and a cam mechanism. This is akin to bicycle quick release – except on a 100x heavier duty scale. To do this, we are holding a LifeTrac Design Challenge – next blog post.
  2. Modify the loader. The straight loader arm design has issues with weight balance, so we will modify LifeTrac for a bent loader arm system to keep the weight closer to the body.
  3. Transition to the Bobcat quick attach standard for implements – to build upon industry standards where thousands of implements will be readily available to LifeTrac users.

All in all, the LifeTrac will be released not as a full product release, but as Prototype IV. We are not ready. We will still publish the full 3D CAD drawings and all documentation as promised, and let the community join in resolving outstanding issues.

With this said, here is a distinction regarding product release. Field testing so far has shown many details, which we will document fully in our Christmas package – when we will publish the Civilization Starter Kit DVD v0.01 with all results to date – which will allow you easy replication of the 4 machines – where the tractor is still in the experimental stage. This means you can build a tractor in the experimental stage – not a tractor with a tested field record. We will continue on obtaining this field record by continuing rigorous testing in logging operations in the winter, at the same time as we complete the Sawmill by early January. We will then continue field testing as we get our agricultural operations off the back burner next year – it is now time for full use of this equipment in providing a year-round diet to participants in the Factor e Farm experiment. I note further that the Lifetrac issue is tractable – our articulated Prototype I is still in operation, and without coupler issues as now.

We are still more excited than ever about the Build Naturally Workshop in our Kickstarter reward structure. With Floyd being a professional CEB builder, we look forward to open-sourcing low-cost building techniques that he has developed over the years, and at that time – showing robust results with cement mixer, trencher, sawmill, tractor, baler, backhoe, hay cutter, and possibly bulldozer– in addition to the tractor, pulverizer, Power Cubes, and CEB press – by July 2012.

How? We’re scaling intensely. Already the workshop is being used to the LifeTrac IV modifications – and the roof is not even on until this weekend. Yes, resources are continuing, with $65k from Kauffman Foundation forthcoming within 2 weeks, along with another $43k donation from an anonymous donor by end of december. Together with Kickstarter, that puts us well over $100k of additional resources for December, and the prototypes will continue. There is no sign of the pace stopping, and in fact, my personal goal is to secure $5M by Jan. 1, 2012 through a few key meetings. This transition also means that we need to improve our development process to a much higher degree of rigor.

Who is our on site crew at present? 4 on site right now with me included, and 3 arriving next week.

We have James Slade here – of historic significance in that he already replicated the CEB press – already working on the tractor. Mike Apostol is here taking measurements and doing full 3D CAD of the 4 devices. Yoonseo Kang is here, and he will document the controller/hydrauilics integration for The Liberator, as he built the 4 automatic controllers. Then Ian Midgley and his crew will be returning to do more video documentation and instructionals, with machine disassemblies documented.

I am calling out for 2 more people to come to Factor e Farm prior to Dec. 24. We could benefit greatly from another video documentor for recording more of the construction process – as Ian focuses on the hardware documentation. See documenter requirements and duties.

I admit that the construction experience has been one of the greatest challenges in my life. From weather, cost overruns, delays, mistakes, people quitting, near mutiny, and things never going according to plan – that was some adventure. We still have far to go – but my soul is rested after Floyd came in on the scene – and I am leaving full implementation details and decisions to his seasoned judgment. That is a great load off my back – and I certainly learned the limits of volunteer labor. While that may have been adequate 5 years ago as we got our feet wet in the reality of survival on land – it takes much more than that where we are now in the world’s spotlight. With that comes additional cost. While we are true to the DIY Ethic – we had to hire people for things that we simply couldn’t do with volunteers – while paving the road and breaking cost barriers for others by documenting what works. We are spending a lot of money – to deliver low cost – as we gather the integrated knowledge set and avail the corresponding open source equipment base.

All together – we will still show you how to build state-of-art structures at $5/sq ft if you have the enabling equipment – even if we didn’t reach that ourselves because of our many challenges. We will go through the detailed ergonomic and economic analysis – and with our documentation, you will have access to the techniques used. And next summer, we will show Phase II of construction – a small demo structure, where we now do it with a professional construction manager, without the pressure of getting a roof over our head before winter. That will be a more pleasant experience, and a fine reward to Kickstarter backers funding us at that level.

All in all, for full transparency on resource allocation from Kickstarter – we will be getting about $57k after Kickstarter and Amazon Payments take their cut. All of the 40k goal will go towards field testing, data collection, and full documentation of the tractor, brick press, pulverizer, and power unit. Given the LifeTrac ailments and construction dilemmas – we will be putting the additional funds towards assuring that LifeTrac will be taken as far as possible within the month left, and that the construction will be completed to a satisfactory level.  Please let me know if you have concerns regarding this decision.

It is challenging for me to manage all my duties while reporting with regular updates, so I would like to take this opportunity to extend the invitation for a full time, on-site documenter. This will facilitate regular reporting. I am looking for an enterprising partner, and not an employee – but a lifestyle investor and startup instigator – someone willing to dive into the deep end, very ambitious, self-motivated, full time, mature, physically able, funded via the work itself, and interested in a 1-2 year commitment as not only a reporter, but as a resource-generating developer and investor in the project at a deep level – one who considers the work not as a job – but as meaning, inspiration, and ever-changing adventure. The last sentence summarizes my position well – and it is becoming clear to me that this project will succeed only with more people of that nature on site.

For the video documenter, one of the rewards is footage of what has been called arguably the most important social experiment in the world. That will make an interesting story, and history.

Along the same lines, I’m set on finding 4 more people for long-term commitment by April 1, 2012: (1), a project instigator/cofounder; (2), farmer; (3), builder; and (4), fabricator. Hey, we’re now close to accommodations for 12 full time people – Dream Team 12 at this point – of entrepreneurs developing Open Source Ecology.

What is Open Source Ecology, really?

As the project grows, I promise to define Open Source Ecology as part of the Civilization Starter Kit DVD v0.01 release. I say this because of recent discussions, especially within the OSE Europe community – regarding how to move forward. At this juncture in the project, as Founder, I need to gather my thoughts to express the full intent of Open Source Ecology – starting with the initial thoughts with which I coined the name back in 2003. This should help clarify much of the approach being taken – including the strategies and time-lines involved – and help the whole community move forward in unity, upon an unprecedented, big, hairy, audacious goal.

Thanks again for your support. Email me directly at opensourceecology at gmail dot com to discuss progress.


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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Historic Significance]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3648 2011-11-16T12:48:11Z 2011-11-16T12:41:16Z October of 2011 marks the first ever replication of a complete Global Village Construction Set (GVCS) machine by an independent third party – the manual version of The Liberator CEB Press. This is a time of historical significance for the GVCS. Congratulations to James Slade of Texas.

See more pictures and a video of James’ work. You can also see his brick pressing samples.

A total of 3 replications of GVCS tools is currently taking place – see wiki for details. After we publish the Christmas Gift to the World, I expect about 100 independent replications by year-end of next year.

I am glad to report that I added a new category to this blog – Replication. We are using the Replication page on the wiki to record all other examples. Please post other examples there. If you do add content, please provide supporting information, pictures, and videos – and feel free to email me regarding collaboration.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Construction Update – November 2, 2011]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3642 2011-11-05T02:29:49Z 2011-11-05T02:29:49Z

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Kickstarter Update: The Context]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3632 2011-12-11T00:50:51Z 2011-11-04T13:56:03Z Dear Supporters, thanks for your explosive support on our Global Village Construction Set Kickstarter Campaign, we have reached our goal of $40k, with 15 days left. There is also no sign of slowing down, so pass this on to your friends:

 

Update on final result:

I have been asked several times now regarding the greater context of the GVCS, in terms of the resources required to complete the 50 GVCS tools. I am now a Senior TED Fellow, and combined with my present application for the Shuttleworth Fellowship, I aim to secure the necessary resources and propel this project to completion on schedule by year-end 2012. That is, with support of many caring people like yourselves, who continue to pour their energy into the project through all of its trials – and a total amount of resources as follows.

The plan for the first quarter of 2012 is outlined in my Shuttleworth Fellows application video:

Shuttleworth Fellowship – Personal Introduction from Open Source Ecology on Vimeo.

In a nutshell, $540k in my hands by January 1, 2012 starts a parallel development process of 13 further prototypes for beta product release by April 1, 2012. The rest follows at a similar pace on a quarterly basis.

With the releases of the first quarter, we will be in an improved position for bootstrap earnings via production at Factor e Farm, and we will be well-positioned for further resources coming into the project, without us having to solicit for them, as is truly beginning to happen now. For example, there are are 3 individuals who offered 5 figure donations as a result of this Kickstarter.

The total price for the base kernel of 50 prototypes is $2M by year-end 2012, not including documentation, not including the development of a fully-featured, open source CAD/CAM package. The former is another $2M to do correctly, and the latter is $800k to hire 12 full time programmers – to deliver these also by year-end 2012.

That’s a brief overview, and I will be posting a construction update video today or tomorrow.

Thanks for your support, and today we aim to press 10,000 bricks. Gotta run.

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Distributive Enterprise]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3628 2011-11-03T16:45:58Z 2011-11-03T16:45:22Z I am applying for the Shuttleworth Foundation fellowship. If successful, this brings in $360k of resources to the project by March, 2012. Listen to this personal intro for the Fellowship, discussing the concept of Distributive Enterprise:

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Dear True Fans: Brick Pressing in Full Swing]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3624 2011-10-31T19:34:55Z 2011-10-31T19:34:55Z We are now pressing 5 bricks per minute at half the rated power of the CEB machine. Big weekend coming up this Saturday, as we have a work crew of 25 coming. We hope to complete the 4000 square foot workshop – 20 columns total as shown in our Kickstarter. We will stack 5000+ bricks on pallets for that day.Subscribe to the Factor e Farm Google Group for further announcements.

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Rebecca http://rrrojer.net <![CDATA[LifeTrac Control Valves Instructional]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3614 2011-10-28T02:22:28Z 2011-10-25T22:05:35Z

Instructional video on the connection of LifeTrac valves to motors, cylinders, and Power Cubes.

In order to make our videos more accessible, going forward we will be uploading to both Vimeo and Archive.org. Archive.org automatically transcodes media into a variety of formats (quicktime, h.264 & ogg). We hope this option will make it easier to not only watch our videos, but also to edit & remix them.

You can follow & participate in our video documentation efforts on the wiki. See especially Video Documentation Best Practices. We hope to get to the point where these instructional videos can be crowd-sourced and produced remotely, but the size of source video files & all the competing formats make it rather tricky. If you have any suggestions to simplify the workflow (Final Cut Pro + Git, anyone?) please get in touch!

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Marcin http://openfarmtech.org <![CDATA[Dear True Fans: Brick Pressing Begun]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3604 2011-10-24T04:43:01Z 2011-10-24T04:43:01Z

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Nikolay <![CDATA[Nonprofit Fundraising]]> http://blog.opensourceecology.org/?p=3577 2011-10-24T04:50:36Z 2011-10-24T04:12:05Z
 

Hello friends,

it is time to make a fundraising team and raise $1M from the non-profit sector, mostly foundations, till June 1, 2012. With commitment and the right people this is quite possible! Till October 28 we will find at least 50 foundations and for 1 week after that we will send 30 grant proposals. Then review our work and continue the fundraising cycle. If you have fundraising experience, good communications skills or you have some helpful ideas, please read in the Fundraising Strategy how to contact us and join the team. Let’s start!

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