Public Policy Area: Enablement

Bruce Perens engages in political activity around two "enablement" issues: the enablement of the individual as an innovator and creator of technology, and the enablement of handicapped people to participate in our society through electronic communications media that are generally intended for those without a physical disablement.

Open Standards are important to the physically disabled, because they allow software that is created to accommodate a specific individual or group to inter-operate with the mass-market software used by those without a disability. Open Source is also important to handicapped accommodation because it is available for modification and redistribution of the modified version without the intellectual property issues of proprietary software.

One of Perens main areas of political and policy activity is the Individual as Innovator. This includes:

Open Source, Open Hardware, Open Content
Open Source is uniquely accessible to individuals and loose remote collaborations, while other forms of software development are focused on corporations. Open Hardware is the practice of sharing hardware designs under the rules of Open Source software licensing. Open Content is writing and media that are licensed as Open Source and open to wide collaboration.
The Freedom to Tinker
The ability of individuals to: perform scientific research and experiments for innovation and for their own education, to have access to scientific materials, and to be able to modify consumer equipment as part of their research - for example to replace its software with software bearing other features (often Open Source).
Learning Without Teachers
Systems for education for those to whom teachers are not available, practical, or even desirable. In general, Perens believes that discovery-based learning is superior to pedantic systems in delivering students that are capable of creativity and who can conceive of and produce new products. Some of his recent work has been to create economical means of building college laboratories for wireless communications, where previously the school had no lab for that program. Perens' prototype lab uses GNU Radio and the Universal Software Radio Peripheral to produce an economical wireless communications laboratory (from $2000 to $1000) where previously a laboratory with $500,000 worth of test equipment from Agilent or a similar vendor would have been necessary.
Amateur Radio for Education
Amateur Radio is one of the few ways that a student can gain hands-on knowledge engineering real wireless communications systems, including space communications. It's the only system capable of worldwide communications without a commercial or government-owned infrastructure. Such infrastructures are always blocked from student tinkering for the protection of the network. Using Amateur Radio, a student can become a global network operator with significant responsibility. The Amateur satellite program, AMSAT, has launched about 60 satellites since 1963 as "hitch hikers" on commercial or government payloads, and is the only significant operator of space technology outside of government and large corporations.

Last modified: Friday July 23, 2010 at 18:19:05 PDT