The Open Cafe / Community Supported Agriculture / Fab Lab Alliance

The Triple Alliance

The New Triple Revolution!

Open Cafes

The physical hub for activity. A place where meals are prepared by people for people to eat for zero money. Its hip and empowering to dine/work/have a chat here.

Community Supported Agriculture

Enough participants work in DIY gardens or community farms and donate the produce to the Cafe and or from government issued food cards.

Open Source Fab Labs

Cafes align with OS Fab Labs to fill out the resource necessity gap to further save financial cost.

Community Interface

At present, this page marks the digital hub for the Triple Alliance. Wikis and e-mail provide the basic communications medium to align efforts until better mediums are made to better refine organizational structures virtually and physically.

Requirements

Here are a few, but hardly all, hoops to jump through to make this Alliance a reality. These examples are to prime the creative pump. The Cafe is the focus:

  • A space and resources are donated for this purpose by those that see the benefit. It can begin in your home and branch out. In urban settings, it can begin with what is already public domain, the local park.
  • Food and beverage donation. Donations for the day/week can be viewed in advance on the Cafe's wiki. Most everyone will want to participate in production because everyone can go here for free. *There are no consumers here, rather, this is where producers are born willingly. There is not much difference between consumption or production here.
  • If money is needed, a wiki shows expenses that need to be met and what is generating them; those in the Fab Lab then have something to make to reduce or eliminate that cost.
  • Event planning. This too is done in wikis and is a place for people to perform or have specific discussions at the Cafe or elsewhere (like at the CSA or Fab Lab) to benefit the Cafe and the people that go there. The Cafe is our focus, because its where all of our interests can unite: in putting food literally on the table.
  • Elaborate and replicate the Cafe as needed from here: http://opencafe.wikispot.org/

Funding

Other than crowdsourcing, here's another way the Trio can receive additional funding until its less or no longer required. If one part of the trio has more surplus funds than another, these funds are tapped by the Cafe or Community Farm as needed based on the Open Source Pact or publicly viewable and revisable mutual agreement. (when necessary) Ideally, this pact works very well as a wiki. The establishment of a wiki contract shows in itself how well the contract works.

The Sell Stuff to Get Stuff Business Model

I want to produce a Fab Lab to make 'almost' anything, but first need money to build one, but I'm not interested in profit so much as getting these labs up globally for abundant access so people can make what they want to have (rather than purchasing it / bashing me over the head for one). In prospect, once these labs are ubiquitous, I will ask "how can I make this?" rather than "where can I buy this?" Later it will only be "where can I make this" as desired. Knowing this foreseeable reality makes the presentation of Open Business plans like this one even more relevant and necessary.

I then go to the market and see what's selling for a high return that's easiest to make with as few tools and resources as possible. Once I've reverse engineered (open sourced) the thing and simplified the production process (potentially ignorant of patent law) I can now build it in our feeble lab and sell it for a return (like on Ebay) in order to put more tools in the lab which are then reverse engineered and resold to produce more fabrication tools and so on until a fully replicable Open Source Fab Lab is in every town around the world.

Breakdown

  • Sell simple products out of a workshop (e.g. Ponoko, Ebay)
  • Purchase-then-reverse engineering more complex fabrication tools from profits
  • Sell the reverse engineered tools to purchase/reverse engineer addition fab tools and or
  • Make more complex items via design submission or sell higher quality items for less where demand is significant

Conclusion

The Fab Lab is only an example presented in the story found in the preceding two paragraphs. The basis of this model can work for a CSA and Cafe as well, but I suspect OS Fab Labs will be the bread winner financially for these groups, even if the bread comes from the CSA and made at the Cafe by real people with real machines. I say OS Fabs will be the bread winners because the stuff made there are more difficult than replicating Cafes or Farms. Argument complete.

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