I submitted a proposal for a talk at CCCamp 2015: an updated presentation of the
Hackerspace Design Patterns. It was accepted!
tl;dr:
Have you observed a Pattern (what works well, and what not so well) at your hackerspace
that you think others can benefit from? If so, please share it with me, so I can share it
with others in my talk.
Design Patterns are generalize-able statements of what works well and doesn't work so
well -- so that others can learn what may work well (or not so well) for them.
The original Hackerspace Design Patterns was presented at CCCamp 2007 and 24C3 when there
were only ~40 hackerspaces in the world. Here's the original Design Patterns (which
are way worth reading!):
http://events.ccc.de/congress/2007/Fahrplan/attachments/1003_Building%20a%2…
These patterns directly inspired the creation of the hackerspace movement. Now that there
are over 2,000 hackerspaces listed on
hackerspaces.org, it's time to update the Design
Patterns to include 8 years of additional collective experience -- and present them at
CCCamp 2015.
FYI:
A somewhat updated version (that needs more updating) of the Hackerspace Design Patterns
are listed at
hackerspaces.org:
https://wiki.hackerspaces.org/Design_Patterns
Do you have any observations of what works well, and what doesn't work so well at your
hackerspace (or any hackerspace)? Can you state it in a way that may be generalized so
that people starting (or running) hackerspaces may benefit from your observation? If so,
please send me your observation, and I'll incorporate it into my talk.
My 30-minute talk at CCCamp 2015 will include some old and some new examples. After the
talk we will have a workshop on Hackerspace Design Patterns, and really get into what
works well, and doesn't work well at hackerspaces. I'll take notes, write it up,
and post it so that everyone starting or running a hackerspace can benefit from our
collective experiences.
Thanks,
Mitch.