Extreme Standardization to Enable International Development
Written by Dave Graham   
Wednesday, 16 January 2008

Imagine if you were the owner of small machine shop in South America, Africa or Asia.  Most of your business is fixing existing equipment and making replacement parts.  Someone whom you know has brought you a print out from the local university computer network.  It is a diagram for a pump made from commonly available metal stock.  You know you and your helpers could machine it.  And when the parts are completed they assemble into the pump in a way that no tools are needed.  Such a pump would be very successful in your market.  You could sell a pump that anyone could without any tools assemble or disassemble and fix. Your worried, will there be problems if you make it?  Your friend explains that the design is available for free.  Just don't sell it to the military.

This is micro entrepreneurship at its best.  It is also the vision of the Extreme Standardization Project.  Within most developing nations there is a much stronger sense of repair and reuse is already established.  With western industry entrenched with establish life cycle models the Extreme Standardization Project believes it will be members of the developing world who will be early adopters to our new technology.  Therefore the Extreme Standardization Project has established International Development as the initial project domain and individuals in developing areas as our "customers."

The first quarter of 2008 will be spent establishing alignments of customer needs with project concepts as well as establishing alignments with other organizations working in international development. Once the online community is established, individuals will be invited to contribute to several efforts to improve life for those in many areas of the world.*  Contact us for more information at here.

*Those who wish to establish their own projects in other domains may still do so.

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 16 January 2008 )
 
Extreme Standardization
Written by Dave Graham   
Wednesday, 16 January 2008

In 1917, exactly 90 years ago to the day of this posting, the New York Times, wrote in an article about the steel industry,

“Despite the larger amount of merchant shipping expected to be turned out by the extreme standardization of designs, the steel industry expects to be able to meet al the plate and structural shape requirements.”

The extreme standardization of the turn of the 20th century saw smaller machine shops and custom design houses give way to the more standardized needs of assembly line work and war production.

Just as the early 20th century saw extreme standardization (relative to current practices) of methods and materials used in manufacturing, so shall the 21st century see radical changes in the move towards standardization.

Many of the same benefits will be seen once again by industry. These will include reduced cost for overall product production, faster time to market, and increased market domains. Unlike the 20th century where extreme standardization was driven by the needs of the new assembly line manufacturing technique as well as the demands of two world wars, the current round of extreme standardization will be driven by the need to optimize the use of natural resources and increase the efficiency of energy used in the manufacturing process.

We refer to these current developments as Extreme Standardization or XS. XS is designed to remove the excess design time, excess raw materials, excess production time, and excess energy from the product lifecycle process. The XS concept looks at the entire product lifecycle and not just they initial production to market. This includes the issues of reuse, repurposing, recycling, and disposal.

The ExtremeStandardization.org project intends to lead this round of Extreme Standardization through development of an open source library of reusable interlocking parts designs. Please consider adding your contribution by joining or supporting the ExtremeStandardization.org project.

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 16 January 2008 )
 

Copyright

Copyright (c) David W. Graham Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license can be found here.

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