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tagged with all of: open-source + sustainability
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Hyperwood is an open-source system designed for creating furniture from wooden slats, promoting DIY building using minimal tools and local materials. It emphasizes sustainability and individual empowerment, drawing inspiration from E.F. Schumacher's and Enzo Mari’s philosophies, while utilizing algorithms to generate construction plans and material lists. The Hyperwood Exchange Format (HEF) serves as a standardized protocol for data exchange within the system.
JetBrains Mellum is an open-source focal LLM for code completion that emphasizes specialization, efficiency, and ethical sustainability in the AI landscape. In a livestream discussion, experts Michelle Frost and Vaibhav Srivastav advocate for smaller, task-specific models over larger general-purpose ones, highlighting their benefits in performance, cost, and environmental impact. The session aims to engage developers and researchers in building responsible and effective AI solutions.
The article discusses the importance of rebuilding open-source software (OSS) projects to ensure their longevity and sustainability. It emphasizes the need for better practices in managing OSS to address issues such as security vulnerabilities and community engagement. The author advocates for collaborative efforts and innovative strategies to revitalize these essential resources.
Creative funding mechanisms for open source projects are becoming essential as maintainers face burnout and financial instability. The Wix Toolset has implemented an Open Source Maintenance Fee for commercial users, while the startup Astral is monetizing its open source package manager uv through a paid enterprise-focused registry. These approaches aim to improve sustainability and support for maintainers while preserving the principles of free and open source software.
The talk explores the notion that while open source software has become mainstream and widely adopted, free software has not yet achieved the same level of success due to persistent reliance on closed software in critical areas. It emphasizes the importance of user control and freedom in software usage, while highlighting the challenges posed by proprietary technologies in everyday devices and their impact on sustainability and user rights. The speaker critiques the optimism surrounding open source victories, revealing the ongoing struggles for true software freedom.