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Mark Frauenfelder on maker culture, openness and Apple

I'm attending Respect The Internet in NYC, a one-day Ketchum conference highlighting the sometimes tenuous and touchy relationship between online culture and traditional marketing/media. Among the morning's star presenters was Boing Boing founder and MAKE magazine/Maker Faire standard bearer Mark Frauenfelder, who discussed the maker ethos and the DIY manifesto (user-replaceable parts! screws not glue!) while highlighting some fascinating sites, companies and grass-roots efforts around the world.

I noticed that Mark was presenting from an 11" MacBook Air, which had the effect of making his lap and hands look unusually large -- but it also made me wonder how the idea of a hackable product ecosystem with full user access is reconciled with Apple's attitude toward hacking in general and hardware modification/upgrades in particular. Since I had the chance to ask him about it, I did. His response is nuanced; he's "not an extremist" about openness, although he wants to see greater accessibility in product design. "Not everything has to be open," he noted.

A video clip of the Q & A (sorry for the Stickam quality) is in the second half of this post. The conference continues this afternoon; you can tune into the live feed here.



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I'm attending Respect The Internet in NYC, a one-day Ketchum conference highlighting the sometimes tenuous and touchy relationship between...
 

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Stides

Flash video??? Haven't you guys seen in your stats that a lot of your readers are on iOs?

December 04 2010 at 5:17 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
GlennAC

Apple has developed two very different hardware paths: (1) User-upgradable products (i.e. MacBook, MacBook Pro, iMac, and Mac Pro), and (2) Nonuser-upgradable "appliances" (i.e. iPhone, iPad, MacBook Air, iPod, etc.). This second category of devices were never intended to be upgradable. You want more features & function? Then you upgraded to the next model. The same is true of other "appliances" we own - TVs, DVD players, refrigerators, micro-wave ovens, washing machines, etc. If you want a user-upgradable device then you need to factor that into your initial purchasing decision.

December 04 2010 at 4:25 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
tim

Surely a healthy dollop of irony there - a "screws not glue" campaigner relying on a piece of technology that simply couldn't exist without a completely hacker-unfriendly hardware design.

If apple listened to this chap, his MacBook Air would still be built into a briefcase.

December 03 2010 at 2:23 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to tim's comment
brian

If you would have read the WHOLE post, rather than jumping down to the comment box the second you read the words "MacBook Air", you might have seen this:

``I noticed that Mark was presenting from an 11" MacBook Air, which... made me wonder how the idea of a hackable product ecosystem with full user access is reconciled with Apple's attitude toward hacking in general and hardware modification/upgrades in particular. Since I had the chance to ask him about it, I did. His response is nuanced; he's "not an extremist" about openness, although he wants to see greater accessibility in product design. "Not everything has to be open," he noted.''

December 04 2010 at 10:29 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
tim

Yeah - I read the whole article with interest and my comment still stands, but thanks anyway.

December 04 2010 at 12:34 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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