WEBVTT 00:00:00.960 --> 00:00:03.568 Tangible problems. 00:00:03.568 --> 00:00:06.643 I always felt from as long as I can remember about the power of science, 00:00:06.643 --> 00:00:09.412 that it could be used to solve pressing issues, solve problems. 00:00:09.412 --> 00:00:13.392 When I studied Chemistry at Princeton it was so theoretical, unapplied. 00:00:13.392 --> 00:00:16.655 And I thought oh ok, maybe if I go into physics it will get better. 00:00:16.655 --> 00:00:19.283 So I did, and was grossly disappointed. 00:00:19.283 --> 00:00:24.870 We were studying wave propagation, and I couldn't understand this one problem, this one equation. 00:00:24.870 --> 00:00:28.706 So I went to the professor and I said whats this about, where does this exist? 00:00:28.706 --> 00:00:31.733 And he said well it actually doesn't exist, I just made it up. 00:00:31.733 --> 00:00:35.227 It's like, oh ok, so thats what we do here. 00:00:35.227 --> 00:00:39.274 That was one of those turning points where I said, wow what am I doing here? 00:00:39.274 --> 00:00:43.884 In an absolute abundance of resources, power, 00:00:43.884 --> 00:00:46.317 human development and culture and everything, 00:00:46.317 --> 00:00:51.497 still theres many issues. Mainly the resource conflicts. Poverty, war, depravation. 00:00:52.743 --> 00:00:56.212 Survival with the awesome technology that we do have today? 00:00:56.212 --> 00:00:59.011 Survival should not take a lot of time. 00:00:59.995 --> 00:01:05.153 When you really think about it, all the wealth that we enjoy today for a modern standard of living 00:01:05.153 --> 00:01:10.584 relies on rocks, soil, sunlight, plants, water. 00:01:10.584 --> 00:01:12.521 Those are all abundant. 00:01:12.521 --> 00:01:17.168 Yet the productive mechanism of society is what makes it scarce, artificially so. 00:01:17.660 --> 00:01:23.658 What if we could survive and thrive up to a modern standard of living, 00:01:23.658 --> 00:01:28.610 and not only that, at two hours a day of work, and from local resources. 00:01:28.610 --> 00:01:30.358 How would that be? 00:01:30.358 --> 00:01:33.635 The most important part of Open Source Ecology is this idea that 00:01:33.635 --> 00:01:36.793 with a small amount of resources and a small amount of money, 00:01:36.793 --> 00:01:42.517 anybody should be able to create a high standard of living for themselves, 00:01:42.517 --> 00:01:46.381 and do it in a way that doesn't require a whole lot of time, a whole lot of money. 00:01:46.381 --> 00:01:50.378 People can actually be empowered but he technology we're creating here, 00:01:50.378 --> 00:01:55.334 so rather than a big corporation deciding what machines can do for us, 00:01:55.334 --> 00:01:59.009 we can decide how we want machines to work for us. 00:01:59.009 --> 00:02:01.674 Instead of relying on other people to make things that we need, 00:02:01.674 --> 00:02:05.039 we can make everything that we need for ourselves 00:02:05.039 --> 00:02:07.620 And we can do it better than Walmart can do it, 00:02:07.620 --> 00:02:10.465 we can do it better than slave labour in China can do it. 00:02:10.465 --> 00:02:15.318 We can make the productive capacity that we need to live the lives that we want 00:02:15.318 --> 00:02:18.842 in our own back yards, and we can do it in a sustainable way. 00:02:19.503 --> 00:02:23.928 We can make machines that we can use to create material abundance for ourselves, 00:02:23.928 --> 00:02:26.121 and then we can show other people how to do it. 00:02:27.859 --> 00:02:29.873 If you have two-hundred people get together 00:02:29.873 --> 00:02:32.738 and if they want to put together a self-sustaining community, 00:02:32.738 --> 00:02:38.470 they don't have many options as far as coming up with the equipment and machines for doing that. 00:02:38.470 --> 00:02:42.153 Thats where Open Source Ecology really comes in. 00:02:42.153 --> 00:02:48.138 The costs of building these machines is about ten percent of what you would buy it for commercially. 00:02:48.138 --> 00:02:51.271 If you take a full blown John Deer tractor, 00:02:51.271 --> 00:02:56.191 it's almost impossible for anyone to go out and try to build one of those for themselves. 00:02:56.191 --> 00:02:58.405 It's a vey custom machine. 00:02:58.405 --> 00:03:02.941 But if you're able to take off-the-shelf engines and 00:03:02.941 --> 00:03:07.252 go down to your hardware store and buy steel and build it yourself, like the Lifetrac, 00:03:07.252 --> 00:03:10.058 then that's much more realistic. 00:03:10.411 --> 00:03:14.238 The benefits of a localised economy are that the power stays within the community. 00:03:14.238 --> 00:03:19.164 Instead of your money, the earnings, going all the way down river, 00:03:19.164 --> 00:03:21.836 what if we can internalise that? 00:03:21.836 --> 00:03:22.862 Keep that wealth in, 00:03:22.877 --> 00:03:25.290 by having all that productive mechanism built in. 00:03:25.290 --> 00:03:28.770 You produce the same, the wealth stays in, you don't have to work so hard. 00:03:28.770 --> 00:03:33.231 Then you can have time for you family and kids, or whatever else is more important to you. 00:03:35.799 --> 00:03:43.359 So its a lot easier and production wise to just have one super compatible module. 00:03:43.359 --> 00:03:47.616 The Powercube right now works with both the Lifetrac and the CEB Press, 00:03:47.616 --> 00:03:51.823 and a few other machines we have, like the Ironworker and the Coldsaw. 00:03:51.823 --> 00:03:56.936 So that provides a much simpler product ecology 00:03:58.197 --> 00:04:02.852 because one power unit serves multiple machines. 00:04:02.852 --> 00:04:07.807 Theres one thing about just being able to look at machines that have been developed on site here, 00:04:07.807 --> 00:04:12.713 and another thing to understand how the development process went through 00:04:12.713 --> 00:04:16.332 and what kind of documentation there is for these machines, 00:04:16.332 --> 00:04:19.479 such that can be replicated and improved on. 00:04:19.479 --> 00:04:25.593 Fortunately we have that ability to have machine information in the digital format, 00:04:25.593 --> 00:04:29.982 and now we have telecom, the Internet, to relay that information and 00:04:29.982 --> 00:04:33.272 have anyone just copy over the files, 00:04:33.272 --> 00:04:36.738 and have access to the model on their computer. 00:04:37.045 --> 00:04:40.594 So Open Source Ecology tries to capture the open source nature of development 00:04:40.594 --> 00:04:45.907 and the fact that we're connected to Nature, to other people, to societal institutions. 00:04:45.907 --> 00:04:50.361 That all has to be considered if we're talking about a paradigm to make a better world. 00:04:50.361 --> 00:04:56.262 Open source was clearly the emerging trend that was so powerful. 00:04:56.262 --> 00:05:00.170 Demonstrated with open source software like the Linux platform. 00:05:00.170 --> 00:05:02.809 When a sufficient number of people come together on a project, 00:05:02.809 --> 00:05:05.950 that project simply becomes better than anything else. 00:05:05.950 --> 00:05:08.821 So we're transitioning that into the hardware space. 00:05:08.821 --> 00:05:13.556 What would happen if people actually collaborated on making open source hardware? 00:05:13.556 --> 00:05:16.162 We have lots of technology out there. 00:05:16.162 --> 00:05:19.639 But to organise the technology in such a way that it's accessible, 00:05:19.639 --> 00:05:24.198 without barriers to people, that is a very significant move forward. 00:05:24.198 --> 00:05:28.636 Now it's there for the individuals to organise themselves, 00:05:28.636 --> 00:05:35.155 and to really dig deeply, almost to what you would say a spiritual level. 00:05:35.155 --> 00:05:39.547 To really change their attitudes, and to take advantage of what is there, 00:05:39.547 --> 00:05:43.116 and to move our civilisation forward. 00:05:43.116 --> 00:05:51.635 I'm hopeful that human kind will arise to the occasion and seize the opportunity offered by this development. 00:05:51.635 --> 00:05:56.915 Open Source Ecology is really about creating the next economy: the open source economy. 00:05:56.915 --> 00:06:01.782 And what does that mean? It's an economy that optimises not only production, 00:06:01.782 --> 00:06:04.312 which the present economy is really good at, 00:06:04.312 --> 00:06:08.009 it's effective in production, but distribution is not so great. 00:06:08.009 --> 00:06:11.047 And how do you do that? And that is by opening... 00:06:11.201 --> 00:06:15.031 so called giving away trade secrets for free, 00:06:15.031 --> 00:06:20.107 or developing open source products for just about anything that we use. 00:06:20.107 --> 00:06:24.896 So imagine a scenario where instead of corporations all competing, reinventing the wheel and so forth, 00:06:24.896 --> 00:06:29.768 a lot of competitive waste, what if everyone were to join together to make the best products, 00:06:29.768 --> 00:06:33.652 the most robust products, that are open source, that anyone has access to producing. 00:06:33.652 --> 00:06:38.880 Then we can run an economy in a collaborative way, instead of a competitive wasteful way. 00:06:45.948 --> 00:06:49.904 A film by Tristan Copley Smith