Prime Radiant/Machine Cards
LMDawnEXTRAPclass card

Open-Hardware Fabrication Collective (LM-Dawn class)

infrastructure pace layer · 2005–ongoing

lifespan: 300 yrs

Class card for the LM-Dawn cluster of federated open-source-hardware (FOSH) fabrication collectives that operate shared design-commons + distributed local manufacturing infrastructure, structurally resistant to vertically-integrated semiconductor and electronics-assembly capture. Adjacency-lift mechanic (Wave-6 Hidalgo generator §3): the FOSH form is NOT a direct derivative of any single DM substrate. It is a lift across three adjacency edges: (1) from foxconn-global-assembly-platform-1988 — concentrated DM electronics-assembly as the bug being inverted; (2) from github-code-collaboration-2008 — the DM open-source-software substrate extended to physical hardware design files; (3) from ford-motor-system-1908 — MM mass-production logic as ancestor whose throughput logic (interchangeable parts, modular assembly) FOSH inherits in inverted form (distributed not concentrated; open-design not proprietary-IP; user-manufacturer not consumer-buyer). Structural features of the class: (1) shared design-commons — hardware design files (CAD, BOM, assembly instructions) published under open-hardware licenses (CERN OHL-S, TAPR OHL, CC-BY-SA) enabling any node to fabricate locally without licensing friction; (2) distributed local manufacturing — the class runs on FabLab/makerspace physical infrastructure (CNC mills, laser cutters, 3D printers, PCB etchers) rather than Foxconn-model centralised assembly lines; (3) self- replication capacity — core sub-machines (RepRap 3D printers, OSE machines) are designed to reproduce their own components, reducing dependency on the DM supply chain for maintenance; (4) federated governance — no single corporate entity owns the class; governance is distributed across local nodes (FabLabs, makerspaces, OSE chapters, Precious Plastic franchises) with the design-commons as shared global layer; (5) capture_resistance_index MEDIUM — individual nodes are captured by grant cycles and equipment-vendor lock-in; class-level design- commons is harder to capture because it is legally irrevocable under open- hardware licenses; (6) proletarianization_risk MEDIUM-HIGH — machine fabrication requires embodied competence (machining, electronics assembly, CAD) that is not trivially re-internalized from documentation alone; the Stiegler tertiary- retention loop (design files as inscribed technical memory → living fabrication competence) is the class's load-bearing vulnerability. Named instances [EXTRAP]: Open Source Ecology (Marcin Jakubowski, ~50 Global Village Construction Set machines documented since 2003); RepRap (~50K self- replicating 3D printers built since 2005; Adrian Bowyer, Bath); Precious Plastic (~1000 community plastic-recycling setups since 2013; Dave Hakkens, The Netherlands); Wikifactory (~5000 design-collab projects; 2017+); Adafruit/Arduino- class open-electronics (~100K cumulative makers; MIT Media Lab / Massimo Banzi 2005); FabLab network (MIT-CBA seed Neil Gershenfeld; ~1750 fab-labs globally per Fab Foundation 2024); Local Motors (cautionary — bankrupt 2022; co-creation failure mode). The Local Motors bankruptcy is encoded in the class as a proletarianization_terminus risk signal: design-commons alone without living fabrication competence infrastructure cannot sustain commercialisation. All quantitative state-variable values are [EXTRAP]; LM-Dawn framing is [CANON-concept] per Wave-0 LM definitions; adjacency-lift mechanic is [CANON] per Wave-6 framework-native-generators §3 Hidalgo generator. [STUB-substrate-enum-gap]: Substrate.institutional is missing from the schema enum; workaround is triple [corporeal, social, semiotic] to approximate the institutional substrate this class depends on.

Machine type

incorporeal

Plasticity

plastic

Substrate

semiotic social corporeal

Wave source

wave-6-adjacency-lift-fosh-collective

Inputs

  • open_hardware_design_files_and_cad_commons
  • distributed_fabrication_node_infrastructure
  • volunteer_and_community_fabrication_expertise

Outputs

  • locally_fabricated_machines_and_devices
  • open_hardware_design_file_releases
  • distributed_fabrication_competence_transmitted

Landscape pressures

  • dm_semiconductor_and_assembly_capture (78% intensity)
  • ip_regime_and_patent_thicket_barrier (62% intensity)
  • node_competence_attrition_and_succession_failure (55% intensity)

Intra-era couplings

Cross-era couplings

State variables

proletarianization_risk
0.52
EXTRAP
capture_resistance_index
0.58
liveness_temporal_coupling
0.72
EXTRAP
heretic_density
0.70
EXTRAP
divergence_index
0.72
EXTRAP
coordination_yield_index
0.48
EXTRAP
machine_lifespan
300
gravitational_weight
0.24
EXTRAP

Phase snapshots

LM-Dawn2003–2012chaotic
LM-Dawn2012–2026chaotic

Notable instances

  • Open Source Ecology / Global Village Construction Set (2003+) (2003) — Marcin Jakubowski founding (rural Missouri); ~50 open-source industrial machines (tractor, CEB press, 3D printer, hydrau…
  • RepRap — Self-Replicating Rapid Prototyper (2005+) (2005) — Adrian Bowyer founding (Bath UK); ~50K self-replicating 3D printers built since 2005; open-hardware license (GPL); Prusa…
  • Precious Plastic — Community Plastic Recycling Machines (2013+) (2013) — Dave Hakkens founding (Eindhoven NL); ~1000 community plastic-recycling setups worldwide; shredder, extruder, injection …
  • FabLab Network (MIT-CBA seed, ~1750 labs globally 2024) (1998) — Neil Gershenfeld (MIT Center for Bits and Atoms) seed; ~1750 FabLabs globally per Fab Foundation 2024; Fab Academy 6-mon…
  • Arduino / Adafruit open-electronics class (2005+) (2005) — Massimo Banzi / Arduino team (Ivrea IT, 2005; CC BY-SA open-hardware); Adafruit Industries (Limor Fried, NYC, 2005; open…
  • Local Motors (2007–2022) — cautionary FOSH failure case (2007) — Jay Rogers founding (Phoenix AZ 2007); co-creation automotive platform; LM-Rally Fighter (2012, crowd-designed vehicle);…

Sources

  • Jakubowski, Marcin (2024). Open Source Ecology — Global Village Construction Set 2003–2024 · 62%
  • Bowyer, Adrian and RepRap community (2024). RepRap — Self-Replicating Rapid Prototyper Project 2005–2024 · 65%
  • Hakkens, Dave and Precious Plastic team (2024). Precious Plastic — Community Plastic Recycling 2013–2024 · 60%
  • Gershenfeld, Neil (MIT CBA) and Fab Foundation (2024). Fab — The Coming Revolution on Your Desktop (2005); Fab Foundation Global Fab Lab Network 2024 · 72%
  • Banzi, Massimo and Arduino team (2024). Arduino open-source electronics platform 2005–2024; Adafruit Industries open-electronics ecosystem · 68%
  • Rao (2024). World Machines — civilizational-era framing