"A Lot of Moving Parts": A Case Study of Open-Source Hardware Design Collaboration in the Thingiverse Community
Kathy Cheng, Shurui Zhou, Alison Olechowski

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed case study of the DrawBot open-source hardware project on Thingiverse, analyzing collaboration practices, challenges, and solutions to improve OSH development.
Contribution
It provides the first in-depth analysis of collaboration dynamics in OSH, offering best practices and design implications for future projects and platforms.
Findings
Collaboration occurred through comment threads and design iterations.
Community overcame challenges with specific strategies.
Insights and dataset to improve OSH collaboration practices.
Abstract
Open-source is a decentralized and collaborative method of development that encourages open contribution from an extensive and undefined network of individuals. Although commonly associated with software development (OSS), the open-source model extends to hardware development, forming the basis of open-source hardware development (OSH). Compared to OSS, OSH is relatively nascent, lacking adequate tooling support from existing platforms and best practices for efficient collaboration. Taking a necessary step towards improving OSH collaboration, we conduct a detailed case study of DrawBot, a successful OSH project that remarkably fostered a long-term collaboration on Thingiverse - a platform not explicitly intended for complex collaborative design. Through analyzing comment threads and design changes over the course of the project, we found how collaboration occurred, the challenges faced,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpen Source Software Innovations
