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Ethernet LinuxCNC RT-8p8c

Discussion in 'Interfaces' started by The Dude, Jan 11, 2014.

  1. The Dude

    The Dude Well-Known
    Builder

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    Does anyone have experience with this board? Apparently it is 100% open and anyone can build it. There's a video of it in action and the documentation is good enough that even I could get it running. Here's their website:
    https://code.google.com/p/rt-8p8c/
    And an image:
    [​IMG]
    And the video:
     
  2. The Dude

    The Dude Well-Known
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    Open Source is like this too. I was once one of those leechers. It was only after I had benefited from open source that I felt gratitude and started to contribute. I still have days where I worry that if I share some info then someone will use it to make money and take away my job. It has already happened to me several times. Now that I'm a little older I realize that "You can win the rat race, but you're still a rat". So here's a big one finger salute to all the rats out there.

    I figured out a way, however, to win. By enabling each other in our quest to free ourselves from the shackles of the rat race, we have more power than the largest corporations. If you look at my income you would think I'm one of the poorest people in the US, but I eat far better than wealthy people thanks to permaculture... I have more powerful software than the wealthiest thanks to FOSS.... I'm more educated than 90% of the people around me thanks to community colleges and public universities... and soon I will be machining and printing custom parts from recycled plastic and aluminium that were previously reserved for only the richest snobs. This is a stepping stone in freeing myself from going to walmart to buy plastic parts... I can manufacture most anything I need and you can too. When this technology becomes ubiquitous, there will be no need for walmart, amazon, etc and their chinese slave labour camps won't get a penny from me. I'm happy to enable others because they are helping to bring down the worst people in society. As a bonus, sometimes I enable another enabler and they come up with things like open-builds, routy, laserprinters, etc and then they enable me to do those as well.
     
    Ed Betlinski and Mark Carew like this.
  3. Mark Carew

    Mark Carew OpenBuilds Team
    Staff Member Moderator Builder Resident Builder

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    Hello @ADarkGerm,
    Your actions towards others are not appropriate. We cannot allow users to be abusive, overly aggressive, threatening, or to "troll". This does not follow our rules. Your message may have been removed or altered.

    Your account's access may be limited based on these actions. Please keep this in mind when posting or using our site.

    Remixing, selling, re-sharing open source projects is what helps to build this community. Everyone not only has this right but is encouraged to share these open source builds with everyone.
    This is the vehicle that helps to bring open source to everyone and is the only way that makes it work.
    When a build is shared as NC (non-commercial) its dead in the water therefore never gets to be improved on.
    So builds like this are locked and thats no good for anyone. What make it grow is its value to the community who also help to improve it and help to spread it across the world.
    This is why we like to encourage the sharing, remixing and selling of open source projects with everyone.
    Too many times we have seen this mentality with business close sourcing an existing open source project taking from a community of ideas and then closing the doors once they have what they need.
    This is against the spirit of open source and should be frowned on. If someone is not willing to share a project as open they should not be posting it on an open source site.
    So with our builds we try to make sure that others have a full rights to share and get them out there.
    If they abide by the licensing rules of re-sharing it (giving proper credits and re-share under the same licence) as open source upon release of their version. The people who have business investing time and money to get open source machines and projects to the masses should be commended on their efforts in helping to ensure open hardware for future generations to come.

    This link is a helpful study on laying out the idea of open source
    http://www.oshwa.org/definition/
     

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