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The COVID-19 Pandemic Highlights the Need for Open Design Not Just Open Hardware

Julian Stirling, Richard Bowman

2021The Design Journal21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has seen a surge in development of Open Source Hardware, especially open source ventilators. Many of these open source ventilator projects have adopted an open-when-finished model due to legitimate legal and liability concerns. This, however, has led to a proliferation of projects with teams across the world independently designing over a hundred mutually incompatible ventilators, representing a huge amount of duplicated effort. A functioning design is necessary but not sufficient for a project to help patients. The device must be taken through regulatory approval by a manufacturer that understands why design decisions were taken. In this article we argue that the open design process developed for Open Source Software can be used for Open Source Hardware. This process not only allows remote teams to work together improving a single design, it also provides the rich history of design decisions that manufacturers need to take the device through regulatory approval.

Topics & Concepts

Open sourceOpen source hardwareCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Process (computing)Work (physics)PandemicLiabilityComputer scienceComputer securitySoftwareRisk analysis (engineering)Open dataOpen source softwareSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)BusinessEngineering managementEngineeringWorld Wide WebOperating systemMedicineMechanical engineeringFinancePathologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Open Source Software InnovationsInnovative Approaches in Technology and Social DevelopmentMobile Crowdsensing and Crowdsourcing
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