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  • Author Author: tariq.ahmad
  • Date Created: 24 May 2016 4:41 PM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 7 Dec 2016 10:22 PM
  • Views 6304 views
  • Likes 12 likes
  • Comments 105 comments
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Winner Announcement: Novena Hacker Laptop!

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element14's The Ben Heck Show

Join the Ben Heck team every week for amazing hacks! Watch them build and mod community-inspired projects using electronics!

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Announcement

Congratulations mzungu you are the biggest fan of open source and winner of the Novena Hacker Laptop! Join the conversation on the element14 Ben Heck Show page and participate in upcoming contests to win more giveaway prizes! 

Highlights

Thank you for participating in the Novena Hacker Laptop contest. We asked you why you love open source and you answered by starting a great discussion.

 

Picking a winner was not easy and several responses would have been worthy of winning.

 

Here are some of the responses we considered:

 

garettmlane writes:

 

I love open source because as its name implies open, completely transparent. Don't like a feature in the code or on a project? Well you can remove that feature because its all open source. Is there a bug in the code? You can fix it yourself or someone in the open source community can help. We as makers all love to help out in the best way we know is possible. That's the beauty of open source. Is there a feature or part you want to add to your project or someone project that you are going to build? Well there is a whole open source community to help guide you through the process of adding it, or if you want to do it yourself you can because the hardware is open source. For instance if you wanted to add say a Bluetooth card to this laptop it can easily be done due to the fact that its all open source hardware. Most of all what I love of about open source: hardware, firmware and software; Is the fact that you can modify it in anyway you seem fit as long as you give attributions to the original creator of the project if you decide to post your design and build on instructables, element14 or GitHub. That ladies and gentlemen is what I love most about open source the fact that its open to modifications, free to use the designs like PCBs and its complete transparency in the way of its code. You can literally see the code and figure out exactly what its doing either by read comment notations or by looking at the code itself.

 

I literally use open-source software everyday.  From operating systems to compilers and libraries to hardware cores and text editors, open source has allowed me to do so much without the hurdles imposed by closed source software.  I started experimenting with Linux in the late 1990s and quickly learned there was great potential in sharing and collaborating around open-source software and open-source hardware projects.

Nate1616 writes:

 

Hmmm, Why do i love open-source.  The main reason is just for the fact the products are geared to by useful to the masses.  So that typically means it does 98% of what i want it to do.  So having open-source allows my to get that 100% usefulness. I've been part of the RepRap community for a while now and its a great example of how open source can benefit the masses.  FDM/FFF printers have progressed tremendously over the years and a huge reason is for the developments coming from that community.  Great businesses have also evolved from the community such as Lulzbot https://www.lulzbot.com/ which is one of the premiere 3d printer manufacturers while staying true the the open-source community it came from.

 

RParkerE writes:

 

Open Source allows for collaboration in ways that proprietary hardware and software do not. Putting the information in the public domain allows for hackers to manipulate the code or hardware in such a way that suits there needs perfectly, and let them publish this information back into the public domain, where another person can add,  take away, or tweak any part of it to suit their personal needs. This collaboration and fluidity allows for open source products to evolve much faster, better suiting consumers, and making a much happier environment all around. There is also a huge community around open source hardware and software, allowing for beginners to pierce into unfamiliar territory with a much smaller learning curve than diving head first into a companies software that you can not see or closed source hardware. I am a very big supporter of projects like Arduino and Raspberry Pi that serve this educational purpose. I am an aspiring engineer, and I love to learn and get my hands dirty. A supportive community with many people contributing really helps me when I reach a stumbling block or come to realize I have hit a wall. I find that open source is a product for the people by the people, ever changing and evolving to suit the needs of the consumers who are actively using it. This is why I love open source.

mzungu writes:

 

I live and breathe Open Source!

 

When I first started, code was (mostly) open and free - the hardware manufacturers were making their money on their hardware sales. My first general purpose computer I built by hand (from a kit) and programmed on a hex keypad in machine code (Z80). Later I remember copying assembly language code snippets, macros, and indeed complete programs, from hard copy listings - from books, magazines, newsletters, and other 'coders'.  We shared.

 

Then came the 'dark ages' where software became proprietary - mostly propagated by Mr. Gates.  It took the brilliance of Mr. Torvalds, supported by the many GNU programmers who built the tools necessary to make his linux kernel useful, to bring us back to the light.

 

I now, since 2005, exclusively use linux on all my 'general purpose' computer hardware - from servers to desktops to laptops, and even my phone! - although I started with linux much earlier, even building a custom linux kernel for a Compaq Proliant 4500 server (abeast!!), booting off the smart array controller (which Compaq said was not possible!) in 1998.

 

Currently, I prefer Kubuntu (Ubuntu with the KDE desktop environment). I use LibreOffice for documents and spreadsheets, DigiKam for transfer and processing of photos from camera and phone - with Gimp thrown in for more complicated photo editing  . I connect to (and administer) remote linux servers via ssh with tmux on the remote.  I build websites on those remote servers with Wordpress and Drupal, and VOIP and IVR systems with FreeSwitch, Bayonne, and text-to-speech with Festival (including Kiswahili TTS 'voice') - designing in an identical LAMP environment on my laptop using Kate as my editor of choice.  I write programs in C, Python, Ruby, bash scripts, and hack php and javascript if I really have to.

 

Hardware is now following software's lead - not only circuits, but even freely reproducible PCB designs and full 'products'

 

Open Source is the future - and I'm glad to be a part of it

shabaz writes:

 

I know people who come up ideas all the time that with a bit of effort could become patentable. Some people are excellent at this.

Publishing it prevents others from patenting it, thus freeing everyone to use software and hardware building blocks that might otherwise be hoarded but never patented, or patented to the detriment of the public.

 

I'm not saying nothing should be patented, but things like the spring-back when scrolling with a touch-screen were patented to the detriment of the majority of the public since perhaps more than 50% of the world do not use Apple products and have no desire to do so (this is just an example).

 

Most importantly, Open source levels the playing field. We do not need to have vast resources as individuals to compete with businesses. And I agree with mconners completely it is really great to see businesses contributing to open source too, not just tweaks here and there but contributing entire projects such as OpenCV and OpenH264.

 

The sharing culture has always been present in the engineering world particularly with electronics since many consumer products shipped with a schematic taped to the inside of the enclosure.(Admittedly governments were needed to force some manufacturers to license their designs for semiconductors, which then sped up progress in the electronics world for everyone).  We then saw the same thing with software, and APIs. We have the EU to thank for the Software Directive, although it was subsequently repealed and replaced a few years back with something less fair (just an opinion). So more work is always needed, but at least the culture and engineering spirit and open source legends still exist that will always fight for more openness. So Open source is important but so is the publishing of information to allow interoperability.

 

But there are other (e.g. non-electronics/software) disciplines that refuse to share as much knowledge, stating that their designs are a big investment with many man-years of effort that must be protected. It might be true in some instances, but probably a lot of businesses in such disciplines and the institutes that work to protect their members are working against the public.

 

The element14 hack camp is happening at the Music Tech Fest in Berlin and to celebrate the occasion we will be giving away a Novena Hacker Laptop.  The Novena is a Linux-powered, open-hardware computing platform that is appealing to DIY hackers because it is designed from the ground up with open standards in mind. You can modify and extend their hardware: all documentation for the PCBs is open and free to download, the entire OS is buildable from source, and it comes with a variety of features to facilitate rapid prototyping.

 

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The Novena Hacker laptop was built using parts from the Novena crowd-sourced project from Andrew "Bunnie" Huang and Sean "Xobs" Cross. It is the only laptop that ships with simply a screwdriver; requires you to install batteries yourself, screw on the LCD bezel of your choice, and obtain speakers as a kit instead of using speaker boxes. If you own a 3D printer you can make and fine tune your own speaker box. Novena sends you parts to build your laptop however you want- making it an ideal platform for hackers who want open, hackable hardware.

 

Watch the Ben Heck Team Build a Novena Hacker Laptop:

 

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Does a Linux-powered, open-hardware computing platform interest you?

 

  • Tell us why you love open-source.  The biggest fan of open-source wins an open-source laptop.
  • Novena is a Linux-powered, open-hardware computing platform ~ every component can be modified

 

Directions:

Step 1:  Log in or register on element14, it's easy and free.

Step 2: Post in the comments section below to share your love of open-source. Videos, pictures and text are all welcomed forms of submission.

Step 3:  Sit back, relax, and enjoy the show!  We will accept entries until 3:00pm CDT June 10, 2016 and announce our winner June 15, 2016. If you need something to do between now and then make sure to check out what is happening This week on element14 Community, or watch more Ben at element14.com/TBHS.

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Top Comments

  • mconners
    mconners over 9 years ago +5
    Let's see, why do I love open source. I think open source hardware and software has been very influential in shaping the world we live in today. The internet, the web, the convenience, none of that would…
  • fvan
    fvan over 9 years ago +3
    Open source enables me to create new project by using and modifying existing code and schematics. That's why I document and share my projects here and on my personal blog, for others to reuse.
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 9 years ago +3
    I know people who come up ideas all the time that with a bit of effort could become patentable. Some people are excellent at this. Publishing it prevents others from patenting it, thus freeing everyone…
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  • mconners
    mconners over 9 years ago

    Let's see, why do I love open source. I think open source hardware and software has been very influential in shaping the world we live in today. The internet, the web, the convenience, none of that would be possible without collaboration of people from all over the world. By allowing the software and the hardware to be free, you allow the makers and inventors to also be free. It reminds me a bit of the old tv show Connections with James Burke, someone makes a small discovery here, it is the missing piece to a puzzle to someone else in another location, someone else views that innovation, improves upon it, and so on, and so on. There is no real reason that you cannot make money and have a great lifestyle in the open source community, experience as an expert in open source technologies can make you a valuable commodity in consulting or implementation, taking knowledge of open source projects and applying them to solve real world problems.

     

    We have seen great leaps in the open source community in the last 20 years or so. It has influenced many large companies, such as Google, Microsoft, and IBM, just to name a few, to dedicate teams of people and contribute resources and software to the open source world. I don't foresee this genie going back in the bottle anytime soon, and I think we are all the better for it.

     

    Mike

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  • tariq.ahmad
    tariq.ahmad over 9 years ago in reply to mconners

    Thanks Mike. Open Source has come a long way. You make a good point about how its influence can be felt in many large companies such as Microsoft (who once compared the GPL to a cancer).

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  • tariq.ahmad
    tariq.ahmad over 9 years ago in reply to mconners

    Thanks Mike. Open Source has come a long way. You make a good point about how its influence can be felt in many large companies such as Microsoft (who once compared the GPL to a cancer).

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