包阅导读总结
1. 关键词:Right to Repair、Framework、Modular Laptops、Environmental Damage、DIY Community
2. 总结:本文主要介绍了 Framework 公司的“可维修”理念,包括其模块化笔记本电脑及这一理念受欢迎的原因,还提到“维修权”运动的兴起,以及 Framework 围绕此理念所形成的社区和用户贡献。
3. 主要内容:
– Framework 公司希望营造可维修的电子产品环境
– 嘉宾 Matt Hartley 称希望电视等电子产品可维修,减少电子垃圾
– “维修权”运动近年兴起
– 旨在保障消费者维修自己产品的权利
– 对抗产品一次性使用造成的环境破坏及部分厂家的维修控制
– Framework 产品可定制和维修
– 避免电脑等成为垃圾
– 嘉宾 Matt Hartley 介绍相关工作
– Framework 公司培养 DIY 社区
– 围绕其产品社区不断成长,用户贡献新功能和硬件
思维导图:
文章地址:https://thenewstack.io/why-frameworks-right-to-repair-ethos-is-gaining-fans/
文章来源:thenewstack.io
作者:Heather Joslyn
发布时间:2024/7/22 19:20
语言:英文
总字数:591字
预计阅读时间:3分钟
评分:82分
标签:维修权,框架科技,模块化笔记本电脑,可持续性,电子废物
以下为原文内容
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SEATTLE — Chances are, if you’ve lived through a few innovation cycles, you’ve got too many old computers — and their cables — cluttering your house. Do you think that if you had the right to repair your devices, to swap out obsolete components for more performant ones, you wouldn’t keep piling up castoff electronics?
So does Matt Hartley, guest on this On the Road episode of The New Stack Makers, recorded at Open Source Summit North America in April.
VIDEO
“We want to bring back that environment,” said Harley, Linux support lead at Framework, which offers modular laptop computers.
“We want the TVs to be repairable again, we want all these things. We want to see all these industries rally with us and participate in that.”
Hartley, interviewed in this Makers outing by Chris Pirillo, described how Framework’s machines can be customized and repaired, helping avoid the landfill-bound heap of obsolete computers and cables that Pirillo calls in this episode “a different kind of technical debt.”
The “right to repair” movement, which seeks to secure the right of consumers to repair their own consumer products, has gained momentum in recent years, a backlash against the environmental damage caused by product disposability and by some manufacturer’s insistence on fully controlling the repair of their products (such as the “black box” nature of Apple products).
The Repair Association tracks “right to repair” legislation and communities in the U.S. and around the globe
Without the ability to repair one’s own computer, Hartley told Pirillo on this episode of Makers, “otherwise, you end up like us or end up like me, who has an ASUS Eee that he just refuses to get rid of. It has absolutely no value other than it flattens paper for me right now. But I’m going to use it someday I swear, as soon as I find the power adapter and a reason to care.”
Fostering a DIY Community
At Framework, Hartley said, “My job is to identify the most likely distributions that we want to focus on providing support for efficiently and also then looking to outreach with community-based support as well … and actually beginning to build those bridges.”
As the Linux support lead, he works “crazy close” with maintainers of the Fedora Linux operating system. “We literally talk every day, we have a Matrix chat that I just keep open all the time, and complain and whine when something doesn’t go my way.
“Otherwise, I’m coming up with various scripts and whatnot to try and make this more user-friendly and make this an easier experience. Because we are seeing a lot of folks coming from [Apple] OS 10, and a lot of folks coming from Windows.”
Framework has found that a community is growing around it, contributing features. For example, Hartley said, “We have LED modules. And we have a binary of basically a program that we can run to interact with those modules. It does really interesting stuff, but it’s not really functional. And for a while I’ve been saying, ‘Wouldn’t be cool, if … [it] showed system resources or something useful.’ Someone apparently released that! I found it in our Reddit today.
“So we’re beginning to see that pattern. We’re also seeing people developing hardware that interacts with our laptops as well, which is incredibly cool.”
Check out the full episode to learn more about Framework and its “right to repair” approach.
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