The Need for Open Hardware
bwt asks: "With all the talk of DRM lately, it occurs to me that the entire concept depends on limiting the choice for computer hardware. OK, so the proper reaction to the copyright industry's attempts at PC market control is to be able to build a PC that they can't control. I know there have been some discussions on open hardware, but most if it was prior to the emergence of DRM as a real threat. In fact, Richard Stallman wrote an editorial in 1999 and said 'Because copying hardware is so hard, the question of whether we're allowed to do it is not vitally important.' DRM has perhaps changed that. Isn't the need for open hardware becoming critical? What is the status of the open hardware efforts?"
You know, I'm really getting fed up with the state
of the dialog in the Lutheran church these days.
It used to be that I could focus on technical
theology by staying away from the radicals in the
"confessing church" movement, but lately fully
half of the discussion at our convocations is
"Nazi-this" and "Nazi-that". I'm just about ready
to give up.
-I like my women like I like my tea: green-