116 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
116 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2636
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Title: HPR2636: Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interviews with Noel from JMU FabLab
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2636/hpr2636.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:51:49
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---
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com, get 15% discount on all shared
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hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15, better web hosting that's
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honest and fair at An Honest Host.com
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This is Tony Hughes for Hacker Public Radio and I've got with me.
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This is a small version of our lab that we have at the art design school, I call our
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mobile fab lab. We've got laser courses, 3D printers, 3D scanners, some virtual reality
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and it's really just showcasing and I'm kind of like demystifying what we do. So it's
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part of our outreach programme, we're in Jumbo's university and I'm being part of a
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maker community really. So what kind of things do you do at the university
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with the equipment you've got here? Oh my words, we start, we have over a thousand
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creative minds in the art design school, so as well as having to support the programmes
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and it seems like we have fashion students, architectural students, fine artists. We
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work with a lot of external sort of small companies as well so we're working on some fantastic
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projects at the moment around creating a mobile sort of hologram maker which will be a local
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company called Real Space called Al Jucopia. That sounds cool. We want to, it's a
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cosplayer open maker competition which was a European project and somehow we won it.
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That's a big surprise to me as well but it gave us a 20,000 pounds, it's a sort of kickstart
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idea and it's really all about how makers and manufacturers work together. So how do you
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take an idea and realise it? And that's just one of the type of projects, but as I say,
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our ethos within the Fab Lab community is we can make our most editing, so that's the
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challenge we can't, but that's what we intend to do and so anything that comes through into
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the Fab Lab, I call it a melting pot, so the fact that I went and much more interested
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is when you get a fashion student and an architect together and what comes about that and all we
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give to is give them access to the tools. I think that's important is giving the skills
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and tools and that's what we really do. So basically if you make the resources available
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they'll find a way of using it and making something out of it. Yeah, maybe build it and
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they will come and that's what we've done and because we've passed this like international
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community. So about 2014 I flew out to, I always say I'm not that clever, so I was given
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this space and like all these things, it was just a room full of equipment and that equipment
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was not too clever, so I just did a Google Sage and a fan of that is a thing called Fab
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Labs and the biggest one in Europe was in Barcelona, so I didn't tell anyone, so I just
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flew out to Barcelona. I met up with the director who's called Thomas Diaz and part
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of that meeting was to talk about how I would become a Fab Lab in Liverpool and that's
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when this really journey started for me and we just grown over that time. So how long
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did I go with that? That was 2014 but it was funny, you know we had these conversations
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and I always say I've been doing this for like maybe five, six years and last I've been
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doing this for 35 years because I just forget before and this new wave of making, I was
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part of the whole new media wave which was about the convergence of devices and technologies
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and now what's happening my time is suddenly new media becomes physical and I think that's
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exciting times for us all really and they call it industry 4.0, I don't really what that
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means but again it's just the converges in technology and I just think about how we can
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democratize, manufacture and how makers can help in sort of like being part of that revolution
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really and it's quite interesting because one of the initiatives outside of Barcelona
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is Fab City so until recently I've always been a Fab Lab but now I'm a Fab City in my
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hands and that's how we create these sustainable maker cities in the future so part of this
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is that is an ecosystem that's supporting so I think that's where the makers come in.
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Yeah you've got does Liverpool, you've got yourselves here in Liverpool. I think people like
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make Liverpool in the north now and all around where does the fabric districts but I'm
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also interested in connecting with the city much wider as well because the history of the
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city is quite interesting because I'm one of the greats who've lost in the 60s the city
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plans to move themselves to the peripheral and that causes another of issues but part of
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that is that you can reconnect these places again as the places where I come from and through
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making and I think that making empowers people and I really do that you know through
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the process through that creative process. Yeah making and the peripheral things that
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go with making like the open source community and things like that. Well that's interesting
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because I've just been in a talk in Barcelona I was out with the students in the Fab Lab
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in Barcelona for a few days, working with them and a fantastic city, a fantastic culture
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around making as well but part of that is that sort of how this has all really sort of
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joined up and sort of that open source community. There's a guy and forgive me if I forgot
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his name, there's a guy who started the free software foundation Gnu and he saw another
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subtle differences between open and free so I'm I'm tendin some move towards free software
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as in freedom, how how that frees the citizen. I think you're talking about Richard Stolmer.
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Yes absolutely fantastic, it's very quirky individual. He was and he was a bit like his some kind
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of good because when he came outside people were hanging off everywhere and he actually
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did a weird thing where he actually had an auction for the Gnu which I didn't really think
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existed for this but he raised 200 euros for him so some boss is Gnu but again you know
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it's the things that some bosses as a city is going to interest me in the future because
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one of the big things that's going to happen and I really believe this is that with
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our replication I think what we have now is a conversation about how we really do democratize
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by the fact that along only when we have a replicator and so in about 20 to 50 years
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we'll have the technology to replicate things and that's when it went less and I think
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it's going to be the time and we have real change. So it'll go from science fiction to science
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fact exactly and there's a guy called Neil Geysenhalte at MIT who started the whole fab
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lab thing who we met with and it was interesting because I was walking around I'm still walking
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around in a bit of a bubble at the moment because he said to me forget bits we get machines
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that make machines think about asses and that's where we're at and the first thing they're
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going to do is replicate water and it's all about scale and that will happen and I think
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we've got to be ready for it and we've got to start we have those conversations and it's
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interesting to call it now the age of abundance when when in the age of scarcity of what happens
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when we can have almost anything and that's that's going to be I think that's what we've got to
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prepare our children for and I'm probably the same age as you we have this it's a legacy thing
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for me and I think that's why I do what I do it's because I believe that we have to prepare our
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children for the future definitely have to prepare the children for the future it's just getting the
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resources to make sure the children get there yeah no it's not going to be a guy's excitement
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I want it I'd love to be around maybe you think he can replicate me now but I want to be around
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for that revolution because when like because I always ask the question is what have you had to
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replicate it what's the first thing you would replicate and in my head I would replicate the
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replicate it I give it to you and that's that's real that's that's the improvisation of the row
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and I'm going yeah and then if then if everyone could have cleaned water that's one of the first
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challenges of say the UN it was that we have to solve and I think that's what we all can do I
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think and that's why I love spaces like this because there's people who do is you think about
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solving problems and then that's one of those problems we have to solve so yeah there's some
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really interesting concepts in all obviously we could we could solve for hours or we've not got
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hours but that's really good could you just give us a link to information about your particular area
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yeah so just follow us on Twitter at lgmufablab and yeah and just send me a message we want to talk
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with and I mean very honestly I'm pretty much open to everything I believe in that everything
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thing so if I believe that we can make almost anything I think we can design almost anything
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and I think we could distribute almost anything so that's our that's our tagline which I've just made
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of thank you very much brilliant thank you thanks
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org
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