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Building Open Source Hardware: DIY Manufacturing for Hackers and Makers

Posted By: AlenMiler
Building Open Source Hardware: DIY Manufacturing for Hackers and Makers

Building Open Source Hardware: DIY Manufacturing for Hackers and Makers by Alicia Gibb
English | December 17, 2014 | ISBN: 0321906047 | 368 pages | EPUB/MOBI/AWZ3 | 15 MB

This is the first hands-on guide to the entire process of designing and manufacturing open source hardware. Drawing on extensive personal experience with DIY, maker, and hardware hacking projects, industry-leading contributors share proven approaches to design, remixing, fabrication, manufacturing, troubleshooting, licensing, documentation, and running an open source hardware business.

Part I covers the emergence and evolution of open source hardware, what open source hardware licenses mean, and the growing role of standards in making hardware more open. Part II offers contributors’ expert advice on key tasks, ranging from creating derivatives to using source files. Part III turns to production, showing how to manufacture at multiple scales–from personal to commercial.

Appendixes provide valuable checklists for design, manufacture, security, and documentation. And to foster even more hands-on learning and experimentation, the low-cost Blinky Buildings open source hardware kit is used as an example throughout.

Learn how to
Get involved in the open source hardware community–its history and values
Develop designs you can successfully prototype and manufacture
Walk step by step through making derivatives from existing projects
Build open source 3D printers, and remix 3D printable objects
Create open source wearables
Work with diverse source files, from electronics to other physical materials
Fabricate your own designs
Move from prototype to commercial manufacturing, and troubleshoot problems
Choose a business model and build a profitable open source hardware company
Avoid pitfalls associated with trademarks, copyrights, patents, and licensing
Write documentation other hardware hackers can use
Use open source hardware in education, helping students learn without boundaries