Open Source and Climate Change

The Ecologist has an article, somewhat superficial and journalistic as it misses really essential developments such as the Global Innovation Commons, but which has the merit of mentioning some work by p2p friends such as Josef Davies-Coates United Diversity and Marcin Jakubowski’s Open Source Ecology projects. New for me was the Homecamp project, an offshoot of Arduino.

Here’s the excerpt on that project:

“Homecamp describes itself as the ‘home hacking, automation and green technology community’. Based in the UK, and enabled by technologies like the Arduino, an open source electronics prototyping platform, members of the Homecamp community take energy monitoring devices like Current Cost, and install them in their homes.

By connecting devices to internet and mobile technologies, Homecampers are able to demonstrate such innovations as lights that switch off when a room is empty, or publishing their energy consumption online so that houses can compete for the lowest usage.

Homecamp projects are completed in the spare time of technologists and software engineers, and are fuelled by the enthusiasm of pushing technical boundaries and demonstrating achievements to their peers. Without the open data protocols of the internet, and the adoption of them by companies like Current Cost (which was the first to enable the connection of an energy monitoring device to the internet), Homecamp would not have been possible.

James Governor is co-founder of Redmonk, a company described as ‘the first open source analyst company’, and a contributor to the Greenmonk blog. An enthusiastic supporter of Homecamp and related initiatives, he believes that the principle of ‘hacking’ is key to finding the right technical solutions to climate change:

‘We need to experiment, and share ideas, in order to develop grassroots approaches to reducing home energy consumption. Without open source there arguably would be no Homecamp.

‘It’s not just the source code that needs to be open, however: “open data” is just as important – sharing information leads to better outcomes, because we’re talking about social change. Hacking climate data, creating mashups (new ways of visualising information) will be key to personal energy footprint reduction.’

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