Date:29/08/2010 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2010/08/29/stories/2010082955370800.htm


National 

Now, open source hardware 

T. Ramachandran 
Draft version likely to be finalised at a September summit in New York 
 
KOCHI: The concept of open source is now generally well understood in relation 
to software, but can it be extended in a clear-cut manner to hardware too?

Yes, say a group of open source hardware enthusiasts, who have been working on 
the draft version of a definition of open source hardware. They hope to finalise
it at a summit, scheduled for September in New York.

Open source in the context of software implies not only the free availability 
of source code, but also the freedom to modify and redistribute it. The concept
has widened and is being applied in other domains too.

Some open source hardware licences like the TAPR open hardware and 
non-commercial hardware licences were formulated and ideas from them are being 
incorporated
into the draft.

Effective definition

Hardware enthusiasts and researchers apart, companies are embracing open source 
hardware these days. So the need for an effective definition of has become
pressing.

Peter Semmelhack, whose Bug Labs is one of the sponsors of the summit devoted 
to the open source hardware movement, says the time has come to crystallise
the concept of open source hardware.

There is a basic difference between open source software and open source 
hardware: the latter will never be totally free.

"The whole goal of open source is to reduce/eliminate the transaction costs of 
innovation in software and now, hardware. The big difference, of course,
is hardware will never be free [as in free beer]. That doesn't mean, however, 
we can't drastically improve the process by which new hardware devices get
to market," Mr. Semmelhack says.

Anybody with a computer can download and install open source software; it is 
hard to replicate and use open source hardware as easily. The process of 
developing
electronic hardware requires an approach, workflow and tools quite different 
from those required for creating software.

Richard Stallman, free software stalwart, wrote in Linux Today more than a 
decade ago, "Because copying hardware is so hard, the question of whether we're
allowed to do it is not vitally important."

Physical difference

But, Mr. Semmelhack went on to tell TheHindu, "There's an obvious physical 
difference between creating software vs. hardware - bits vs. atoms. But 
philosophically
the approaches are identical. In the world of software applications, open 
source promises that when you get the application executable, you also receive
the source code to modify that application. Open source hardware similarly 
promises that when you buy a device [the "executed" version of the design],
you also receive all the source material for that device so you can modify it. 
In the case of hardware, it's not a single text source file but a collection
of documents that, in total, equal everything you need."

Implications

G. Nagarjuna, chairman, Free Software Foundation, India, says: "Free software 
movement and its method of granting freedom has implications for not merely
software, but also other technologies, not even merely for computing devices. 
Therefore, when the hardware specs are known to the engineers, and they have
the freedom to make changes, innovation will take several leaps."

Some feel that India, which has a lot of catching up to do on the hardware 
front, should aggressively exploit the potential of this concept. "I would say
that it is relevant for every country, including India. India will definitely 
get the advantage."
E Renuka,
SECTION OFFICER,
ICT CENTRE FOR VISUALLY CHALLENGED,
CHMK LIBRARY,
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
CALICUT, UNIVERSITY P O,
MALAPPURAM DISTRICT,
KERALA.
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