Capitalized FOSS

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Vivianne 2024-05-20 13:29:26 -04:00
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commit 1711899ab5
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GPG key ID: F3E249EDFAC7BE26
3 changed files with 12 additions and 12 deletions

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
[MUSIC PLAYING]
CHRISTINE LEMMER-WEBBER: Hello and welcome to Fos and Crafts.
CHRISTINE LEMMER-WEBBER: Hello and welcome to FOSS and Crafts.
MORGAN LEMMER-WEBBER: A podcast about free software, free culture, and making things together.
@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ C: So what I realized was if I failed that hard and people really enjoyed it, I
M: Yeah.
C: I had a couple of other talks, not as funny as that, where I also kind of like just leaned into being over the top. And so maybe that's why, a decade-plus later, doing Foss & Crafts.
C: I had a couple of other talks, not as funny as that, where I also kind of like just leaned into being over the top. And so maybe that's why, a decade-plus later, doing FOSS & Crafts.
M: Yeah we're on a podcast.
@ -342,7 +342,7 @@ M: Thanks, bye!
[MUSIC PLAYING]
C: Foss and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
C: FOSS and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
M: It's hosted by Morgan Lemmer-Webber and Christine Lemmer-Webber.

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
[Music]
CHRISTINE LEMMER-WEBBER: Hello, and welcome to Foss & Crafts.
CHRISTINE LEMMER-WEBBER: Hello, and welcome to FOSS & Crafts.
MORGAN LEMMER-WEBBER: A podcast about free software, free culture, and making things together.
@ -9,11 +9,11 @@ M: And my co-host Christine.
C: Well, today, we are talking about free soft wear. Wait a minute. Free, soft, wear, three words. What does this mean?
M: So this is maybe one of the more "making things together" episodes of this podcast we've made so far. "Free, soft, wear" is the term that we've been using in the greater Foss & Crafts community to talk about creative patterns that are created and released under free culture licenses.
M: So this is maybe one of the more "making things together" episodes of this podcast we've made so far. "Free, soft, wear" is the term that we've been using in the greater FOSS & Crafts community to talk about creative patterns that are created and released under free culture licenses.
C: Mm-hmm. Who came up with that term?
M: Well, it was kind of workshopped in the Foss & Crafts channel so--
M: Well, it was kind of workshopped in the FOSS & Crafts channel so--
C: On irc.libera.chat
@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ M: If you want to join that community. So, Elena Valhalla, just Valhalla on IRC,
C: Cat Walsh comes in with free-space-soft-space-wear, W-E-A-R, and says, "I'm going to see myself out." But in fact...
M: We loved it. And we kind of ran with it. So Valhalla had already been making and releasing sewing patterns under creative commons licenses long before this discussion happened in the Foss and Crafts channel. And I a mental backlog of patterns but hadn't really released any, but I really liked this idea.
M: We loved it. And we kind of ran with it. So Valhalla had already been making and releasing sewing patterns under creative commons licenses long before this discussion happened in the FOSS and Crafts channel. And I a mental backlog of patterns but hadn't really released any, but I really liked this idea.
C: And it's something you've been building upon, right? And like kind of encouraging other people to build upon too. But in a certain sense, this is building upon a long social history of sewing, right? And like other textile work.
M: Yeah.
@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ M: Yeah, she has a whole directory on her website of sewing patterns. And this p
C: That's great.
M: So even before this whole conversation was brought up in the Foss and Crafts community, the first time that I really thought about licensing for sewing patterns was at the beginning of the pandemic, when everyone was making face masks because the supply of personal protective equipment was extremely low, given the sudden increase in need for it. And one of our friends, Dan Gilbert, made a pattern that was released under a again Creative Commons attribution share-like license. And I started thinking about the idea of iterations for patterns specifically with the face masks because at the beginning of the pandemic no one really knew what was going on health-wise and transmission-wise. So there were a lot of healthcare professionals on social media saying, "if you're making your own face masks, here's the things that are going to help." So having a mask pattern that you could use the bones of, but also iterate on as you got more accurate information or as better materials became available, that was appealing to me. So the pattern that I used, as I said, was made by our friend Dan, who you may remember from the episode on the TinyNES. And since he is pretty active in open hardware, he already had the mental blueprints for creating things that could be released in free culture ways.
M: So even before this whole conversation was brought up in the FOSS and Crafts community, the first time that I really thought about licensing for sewing patterns was at the beginning of the pandemic, when everyone was making face masks because the supply of personal protective equipment was extremely low, given the sudden increase in need for it. And one of our friends, Dan Gilbert, made a pattern that was released under a again Creative Commons attribution share-like license. And I started thinking about the idea of iterations for patterns specifically with the face masks because at the beginning of the pandemic no one really knew what was going on health-wise and transmission-wise. So there were a lot of healthcare professionals on social media saying, "if you're making your own face masks, here's the things that are going to help." So having a mask pattern that you could use the bones of, but also iterate on as you got more accurate information or as better materials became available, that was appealing to me. So the pattern that I used, as I said, was made by our friend Dan, who you may remember from the episode on the TinyNES. And since he is pretty active in open hardware, he already had the mental blueprints for creating things that could be released in free culture ways.
C: Mhm.l
@ -328,7 +328,7 @@ M: I'm wearing socks that I made and you're wearing a skirt.
C: I am wearing a free soft wear! It even has "Free Soft Wear" on the thing.
M: Oh, yeah, that's another thing we didn't talk about. So right after we had the initial conversation on the Foss and Crafts IRC channel, Valhalla ordered some clothing tags for herself to use that said "Free Soft Wear". And then I got jealous and I ordered some clothing tags for myself to use that said "Free Soft Wear".
M: Oh, yeah, that's another thing we didn't talk about. So right after we had the initial conversation on the FOSS and Crafts IRC channel, Valhalla ordered some clothing tags for herself to use that said "Free Soft Wear". And then I got jealous and I ordered some clothing tags for myself to use that said "Free Soft Wear".
C: And did you release the image or like SVG for those under a free software license?
@ -358,7 +358,7 @@ C: Bye.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
C: Foss and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
C: FOSS and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
M: It's hosted by Morgan Lemmer-Webber and Christine Lemmer-Webber.

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@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ M: You broke patterns!
[MUSIC PLAYING]
C: Hello. And welcome to Foss and Crafts.
C: Hello. And welcome to FOSS and Crafts.
M: A podcast about free software, free culture and making things together!
@ -618,7 +618,7 @@ M: Thanks everybody. Bye.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
C: Foss and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
C: FOSS and Crafts is released under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International License.
M: It's hosted by Morgan Lemmer-Webber and Christine Lemmer-Webber.