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A person working on a circuit board at a Re:publica makerspace. The maker culture is a contemporary subculture representing a technology-based extension of DIY culture [1] that intersects with hardware-oriented parts of hacker culture and revels in the creation of new devices as well as tinkering with existing ones.
Maker education is an offshoot of the maker movement, which Time magazine described as "the umbrella term for independent innovators, designers and tinkerers. A convergence of computer hackers and traditional artisans, the niche is established enough to have its own magazine, Make, as well as hands-on Maker Faires that are catnip for DIYers who used to toil in solitude". [3]
A makerspace in the College of San Mateo library. A library makerspace, also named Hackerspace or Hacklab, is an area and/or service that offers library patrons an opportunity to create intellectual and physical materials using resources such as computers, 3-D printers, audio and video capture and editing tools, and traditional arts and crafts supplies.
The American economy's still sluggish. Take heart, though. There's a revolution under way that could change everything -- and provide some much-needed economic hope. Wired Editor-in-Chief Chris ...
Open manufacturing, also known as open production, maker manufacturing or material peer production and with the slogan "Design Global, Manufacture Local" is a new model of socioeconomic production in which physical objects are produced in an open, collaborative and distributed manner [1] [2] and based on open design and open-source principles.
Disney was all over the press during the most recent business news cycle for buying something called Maker Studios. In a nutshell, the asset is a multi-channel network collection of thousands of ...
The motorcycle maker said it would no longer participate in the ranking of workplace equality compiled by the Human Rights Campaign, and that its trainings would be related to the needs of the ...
Textiles of the Arts and Crafts Movement. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28536-5. Penick, Monica, Christopher Long, and Harry Ransom Center, eds. The rise of everyday design: The arts and crafts movement in Britain and America (Yale UP, 2019). Richardson, Margaret. Architects of the arts and crafts movement (1983)