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● 04.06.14

●● Resurgence of Open Hardware in the News

Posted in News Roundup at 10:55 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Arduino

Arduino: Open Hardware at 10Arduinos, 3D printing, and more at Red Hat open hardware day

Novena

Crowdfunding an open source laptop, a new Apache project, and moreMeet Novena, the pricey PC that’s open-source inside and outNovena is a DIY open-source laptopCrowdfunding the Novena Open LaptopWe’re launching a crowdfunding campaign around our Novena open hardware computing platform. Originally, this started as a hobby project to build a computer just for me and xobs – something that we would use every day, easy to extend and to mod, our very own Swiss Army knife. I’ve posted here a couple of times about our experience building it, and it got a lot of interest. So by popular demand, we’ve prepared a crowdfunding offering and you can finally be a backer.Open-source laptop Novena is a ‘labor of love’ from the first Xbox hackerSpeaking at the Embedded Systems Conference today, Andrew “Bunnie” Huang introduced a project dubbed Novena. He said that the hardware and software specs for the machine will be made available for anyone to use.When Raspberry Pi Isn’t Enough: Behold the Open Source LaptopThis open source laptop helps developers gain the freedom of doing hardware experimentsThe Almost Completely Open Source Laptop Goes on SaleEarlier this year, the two Singapore-based engineers fashioned a laptop made almost entirely from open source hardware, hardware whose designs are freely available to the world at large. They called it Project Novena. Anyone could review the designs, looking for bugs and security flaws, and at least in theory, that meant you could be confident the machine was secure from top to bottom, something that’s more desirable than ever in the post-Edward Snowden age.

Minnowboard Max

Intel beefs up open source Raspberry Pi challenger and slashes priceIntel has beefed up its open source single-board computer and cut its price in half.The Minnowboard Max features an open hardware design and is targeted at software application development pros and enthusiasts who want to code for the “deeply embedded” market.Intel Releases $99 “Minnowboard Max,” An Open-Source Single-Board ComputerNot to be outflanked by rivals, Intel has released the $99 Minnowboard Max, a tiny single-board computer that runs Linux and Android. It is completely open source – you can check out the firmware and software here – and runs a 1.91GHz Atom E3845 processor.The board’s schematics are also available for download and the Intel graphics chipset has open-source drivers so hackers can have their way with the board. While it doesn’t compete directly with the Raspberry Pi – the Pi is more an educational tool and already has a robust ecosystem – it is a way for DIYers to mess around in x86 architected systems as well as save a bit of cash. The system uses break-out boards called Lures to expand functionality.

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