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The New Industrial Revolution

The New Industrial Revolution. Makers. Book by Chris Anderson Presented by Jennifer, Joseph, and Linda EDTC 802 July 17, 2013. Part One – The Revolution. Reinventing Industry - Maker Spirit Entrepreneur v. Inventor - DIY Web Culture Atoms v. Bits Maker Movement Revolutions

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The New Industrial Revolution

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  1. The New Industrial Revolution Makers Book by Chris Anderson Presented by Jennifer, Joseph, and Linda EDTC 802 July 17, 2013

  2. Part One – The Revolution • Reinventing Industry - Maker Spirit • Entrepreneur v. Inventor - DIY • Web Culture • Atoms v. Bits • Maker Movement • Revolutions • Desktop Publishing – 3D • Long Tail

  3. Part Two – The Future • Bits to Atoms • Open Software • Open Source Community • Mass Customization • Crowd Funding financing • Open Access - “C to B”

  4. Part One

  5. Maker Spirit - DIY • Core: Entrepreneurs emerging • from Maker Movement • Tools, design, fabrication machines, sharing • Industrializing DIY spirit (inventing) • Both small and global ability • Global undergroundIndie Web Culture • Atoms (sw) v. bits (hw) • AKA: IT and Everything Else • Flipping Engine of the World - manufacturing

  6. Industrial Revolution Technologies that amplify productivity of people 1st: 1790s – rural to industrial • Machines increased productivity 2nd: 1850s – factory manufacturing • Transportation, chemical, electric 3rd: 1950s – Information Age • PC, digital = industrialization of Maker Movement

  7. Desktop – industrial machinery • 3-D printing (plastic replaces ink) • Desktop fabrication is leading to desktop manufacturing • DIY • Long Tail: everything digital, shift in culture toward niche goods

  8. Part Two

  9. Digital Manufacturing • CNC – Computer Numerical Control machines use CAD & CAM • CNCs - digital tools (printers, laser cutters) turning Bits to Atoms

  10. Openness • Country built on • Patent Act 1790 – inventory makes $ • Open software on browsers, phones, servers • Open hardware – like MakerBot 3D • Open source – give away in hopes of getting back

  11. Financing Maker Market • Crowdfunding – collective $ contributions to get product made • Kickstarter turns customers into community • IndeGoGo, RocketHub, Funded By Me • Gives ability to fund & create Quirky products

  12. Long Tail Maker Business • Industrialized crafting – Etsy • Fast growing marketplace for Long Tail • Growing of small businesses • C to B – consumer to business • DIY suited • Fastest in China • Alibaba – opens global supply to buyers

  13. Thank you Q&A?

  14. Works Cited • Anderson, C. (2012). Makers: the new industrial revolution. Random House. • Presentation Link- www.tinyurl.com/njcumakers

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