"The past ten years have been about discovering new ways to create, invent, and work together on the Web. The next ten years will be about applying those lessons to the real world.Ainda esta manhã, durante o noticiário das 8h00 na Antena 1, um repórter em Bragança relatava que está a regressar o hábito de fazer o pão em casa... mais um sintoma da economia DIY a regressar. Sim, não é só a tecnologia de ponta: é a cultura que vê como natural produzir comida, roupa, agricultura, jardinagem. Prosumers com indústrias de vivenda... o velho casal Toffler acertou em toda a linha.
…
Wondrous as the Web is, it doesn’t compare to the real world. Not in economic size (online commerce is less than 10 percent of all sales), and not in its place in our lives. The digital revolution has been largely limited to screens. We love screens, of course, on our laptops, our TV’s, our phones. But we live in homes, drive in cars, and work in offices. We are surrounded by physical goods, most of them products of a manufacturing economy that over the past century has been transformed in all ways but one: unlike the Web, it hasn’t been opened to all. Because of the expertise, equipment, and costs of producing things on a large scale, manufacturing has been mostly the provenance of big companies and trained professionals.
That’s about to change.
Why? Because making things has gone digital: physical objects now begin as designs on screens, and those designs can be shared online as files. This has been happening over the past few decades in factories and industrial design shops, but now it’s happening on consumer desktops and in basements, too. And once an industry goes digital, it changes in profound ways, as we’ve seen in everything from retail to publishing. The biggest transformation is not in the way things are done, but in who’s doing it. Once things can be done on regular computers, they can be done by anyone. And that’s exactly what we’re seeing happen now in manufacturing.
Today, anyone with an invention or good design can upload files to a service to have that product made, in small batches or large, or make it themselves with increasingly powerful digital desktop fabrication tools such as 3-D printers. Would-be entrepreneurs and inventors are no longer at the mercy of large companies to manufacture their ideas."
terça-feira, outubro 16, 2012
Sintomas da economia DIY a regressar
Mais um trecho de "Makers: The New Industrial Revolution" de Chris Anderson:
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