On Friday 11 January 2008 23:46:57 Lourens Veen wrote:
> On Friday 11 January 2008 22:02:05 Michael Meeuwisse wrote:
> > On 11 Jan 2008, at 21:55, Attila Kinali wrote:
> > > On Fri, 11 Jan 2008 21:39:03 +0100
> > >
> > > Lourens Veen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >> Okay, I will then. I've been looking through the site for a bit,
> > >> and they want quite a lot more than a few lines with the topic
> > >> it seems. They claim they get two to three times as many
> > >> applications as they have room for as well.
> > >>
> > >> Which means I have about three hours and twenty minutes to churn
> > >> out two
> > >> kick-ass presentation proposals. I'd better get to work.
> > >
> > > If you need someone for reviews, feel free to send me anything
> > > you want. Though i cannot guarantee that i'm still awake in 3h.
> >
> > Same here, except for the cannot guarantee.
>
Right, and here's the other one:

Philosophy and Economics of Open Hardware
By Lourens Veen, The Open Hardware Foundation

In recent years, and even before that, we have seen a multitude of 
projects and products that use the term "Open Hardware" see the light. 
But what is Open Hardware? Which degrees of openness exist, and what 
might an Open Hardware definition look like? How does one license Open 
Hardware? Is Open Hardware limited to electronics and computers, or 
will we be sitting on Open Hardware chairs one day? Is Open Hardware 
economically viable, and what are its economic advantages and 
disadvantages versus proprietary hardware?

In this presentation I will introduce the Open Hardware Foundation and 
its goals, and explore the above issues together with the audience.

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