the makers’ bill of rights rests on the simple premise of making products easy to operate and modify by using commonly available parts and designing them to be replaced or modified. it could stand as the beginning of an open-source industrial design philosophy. among its many advantages are that open products can last longer, and that the modifications done by hackers today could become standard features to consumers tomorrow. here it is:
Meaningful and specific parts lists shall be included – Cases shall be easy to open – Batteries should be replaceable – Special tools are allowed only for darn good reasons – Profiting by selling expensive special tools is wrong and not making special tools available is even worse – Torx is OK; tamperproof is rarely OK – Components, not entire sub-assemblies, shall be replaceable – Consumables, like fuses and filters, shall be easy to access – Circuit boards shall be commented -Power from USB is good; power from proprietary power adapters is bad – Standard connecters shall have pinouts defined – If it snaps shut, it shall snap open – Screws better than glues – Docs and drivers shall have permalinks and shall reside for all perpetuity at archive.org – Ease of repair shall be a design ideal, not an afterthought – Metric or standard, not both – Schematics shall be included
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