Category Archives: Community Feedback

New Release of YouMagine

We’ve been getting lots of feedback lately from community members. We really love that you guys are participating and aiding our development. Keep your suggestions and ideas coming! Also, if you have any complaints or find any bugs, please do let us know as well.
You can now see who is following you.

You can now see who is following you.

We’ve done a big new release today that will improve YouMagine.
  • Today will bring a huge performance and speed improvement because of caching, smart reloading and indexing.
  • The site should feel more responsive and faster. 
  • Searching now really finds something. We’ve been very unhappy with our site search and have improved it.
  • You can now search for designs based on their name or description. This is only the first implementation of a faster search, but in the future it will really get much better still.
Improved Search Results on  YouMagine

Improved Search Results on YouMagine

  • The YouMagine site is now responsive on mobile devices. Initially the site would not display well on mobile and we’ve now solved this. 
  • We’ve added “Collections” where you can add designs to a collection, e.g. “Things to print” or “Architectural Things I Find Beautiful. 
  • The “Designer” pages now have nice stats. 
  • You can upload a zip file and choose “Expand” and it will extract the file for you adding its contents as documents. 
  • We’ve also made some layout changes such as to the the footer.
  • We’ve also added a button to upload your documents faster. 
  • You can now see who is following you and keep in touch with them. 
  • You can now on your profile fill in your skill set.
  • We’ve had quite a few complaints about registering with GitHub accounts. This functionality was broken. We’ve fixed it and now logging in with Github & Facebook works again. Sorry about this.
  • You can also resend a confirmation e-mail should you not have received it.
  • Additionally we’ve made some small bug fixes.
Resend confirmation email button

Resend Confirmation Email.

We’re working on improving the site and may be adding to our team soon. We hope you like the improvements! Please do keep giving your feedback, this is important to us.
Being discussed screenshot

Being discussed is clearer we think for users.

 

Google Glass Interviews Part 2 Chris Booth Internet Archive.

At Wikimania we did a number of Google Glass interviews. We wanted to see if it would be easy and fun to quickly interview people. The videos are unedited and what we like about them is that people look straight at the viewer. Here is the first post which goes more into detail about what we learned.

The below interview is a short two minute explanation of the digitization efforts of the Internet Archive by Chris Booth the UK Regional Digitization Manager of the Internet Archive. The Internet Archive aims to digitize and offer ebooks, webpages and other content for download. A library of Alexandria of our modern world, if you will.

 

 

3DShare: Sharing an Open Source license for 3D Printed things and our ToS

At YouMagine we want to help people collaborate, remix and design together online. We want to build the tooling to make it easier for anyone to design, work together and share using 3D printing. We’re not alone on this, there are a lot of fellow travellers who are doing the same or similar things. We’ve been thinking about how we can act as a force multiplier by helping our competitors and companies in the same field. If we can make things cheaper, easier or better for them the chance that one of us succeeds will be higher. The chance that we will collectively succeed in making things as supple as other data will be higher also. After all YouMagine wants to make the plumbing for 3D printing and make things as malleable as memes.  We see our task as that of creating the necessary infrastructure on top of which others can build. And not in the sense of being a platform as Apple is a closed platform but rather a source of data, information and tooling for other people’s platforms and the community as a whole. We’re not a platform,  but rather a foundation supporting other platforms not locking anyone in. Simultaneously we’ve been thinking about our community and how we can work together with them to create a better YouMagine. We’ve decided to let our community influence and guide all the major decisions and directions we take. So we want you to tell us where we need to go and what we should be doing. Feel free to at any time contact me with feedback, ideas, critiques etc.

Share3D

This is why we’re sharing our first major Share3D project with you. Share3D is a part of YouMagine that we will share with the “internet of things”, open hardware & 3D printing communities. It is a set of tools to help them accelerate their development. We looked at obstacles to a 3D printed world, costs that others would have to incur & problems other people were not solving. We decided that the most important first thing to make and share were in the legal realm. A lot of people overlook legal and its implications. When people do look into it they all individually have to spend a lot of time and money to understand all of the patent, copyright & liability implications and issues surrounding the sharing of things. We concluded that we would have the highest immediate impact on the community by ameliorating their risks and to give their users clarity about their rights. We’ve holistically looked at this issue from the point of the designer, the 3D printer operator, the platform and the end user. We have tried to come up with the clearest & most equitable guidelines for all. We’ve found this especially important because a lot of the people involved in the sharing of things are persons but may be faced with severe measures usually reserved for companies (eg infringement, product liability, wrongful death). Also a single tort case in the US for example would be enough to sink any one of the platforms in the Sharing of Things market.

Sharing, so that others can build.

This is why we will create a Terms of Service & license for 3D printed things and share these with the 3D printing, open hardware and IoT communities.

Terms of Service

We’ve decided to share our Terms of Service with any and all platforms or websites that do co-collaboration, sharing of 3D data, online 3D collaboration, IoT & 3D printing. We will use our experience to work with our community on formulating an ideal ToS document that can be used by any and all free of charge.

ToS Goals

  • We want a huge corporate platform and a one man band to both be able to let people remix and share online without falling foul of relevant laws.
  • We also want a ToS to be available that respects community member’s rights. We want this ToS to be as clear and concise as possible and via bullet points point out the major legal implications to users.
  • We want this ToS to be functional in reducing legal risk to platform owners and community members alike across the breath of criminal, IP & other tort risks.
  • We want to preempt the first serious legal challenge for patent infringement on a platform by doing what we can to mitigate the impact this would have on an organization or individual.
  • We want to preempt the first serious product or manufacturer liability case by clearly reducing the risk to the 3D printer operator, end user and platform.
  • We want to make sure that end users of parts understand that there is a “user beware” principle in effect and that the functionality of end use parts can not be guaranteed. We want to indemnify 3D printer operators and designers from any liability that could be incurred from the use of their parts.
  • We want to make sure that printer operators and end users of parts understand that the fact that the designer, person who modifies a part, person who prints out a part & the user are all separate actors and have very little control individually over the functionality of the end use part.
  • We want to ensure that end users understand that because parts are designed and modified by many the functionality and fitness of any individual part for any individual task can not be guaranteed by any individual.
  • We want end users of parts to understand that due to the high variability of 3D printers, 3D printer settings & consumables the same file printed by different people or printers may result in a completely different object.
  • We want end users to understand that the same level of product expectation can not be required from a product that is individually 3D printed than that of one who is mass produced.
  • We want end users of parts and any parties to whom they give access to those parts to understand that if a file has been designed and shared for free it would be unreasonable for them to expect any kind of true functionality from that part.
  • We want to create this document with as much feedback as is possible.

Some questions we’d like to ask:

Questions 1.

  1. Of the things mentioned above, what do you disagree with?
  2. What have we missed?
  3. What are some IoT or open hardware projects emerging that we should pay special attention to?
  4. For automobiles, drones and the like liability poses a high risk. Should we exclude these things from the license? Make a another license for high risk things?
  5. What do you feel we should do about guns? We could exclude these completely or let them be shared?
  6. Is it fair to the user to in a blanket way just label everything that is made with IoT, Open hardware & 3D printing experimental?  Is it tenable in the long run?

3DShare: An open source license for 3D printed things

Existing licensing such as Creative Commons or GPL has been created for use with software or things such as images. These licensing structures are not designed for physical objects but rather for bytes alone. We anticipate a remix world where complex 3D printed things will be made using lots of different parts and many designers. Attribution, attribution of changes, taxonomies of the things themselves and functionality of the thing would not fit in existing licenses. Also product liability and other real world concerns have not been defined within the framework of these licenses. This is especially important because we see things emerging such as 3D printed houses, open hardware projects that spawn consumer devices & the use of open source design files in commercial products & projects. Because of this we will together with our community and lawyers create an open source license for 3D printed things. The aim of this license is to provide for an as free and fair as possible sharing of design files for objets. We hope to encourage collaboration and remix of design files, projects, devices and tools. We hope to make it clear which rights are and are not transferred. We hope to also make it clear what the liability and level of functionality that can be expected is. We also want to let designers decide who can do what with their files under what circumstances.

We would like your feedback on what this license should contain. So below some questions:

Questions 2

  1. Open Source or Free Software?
  2. If Mary makes a design file for a hinge and Bob adapts it. Should Bob & Mary be considered the designers of the object? Or should Mary be designated as the designer and Bob the “adaptor” of it?
  3. If a team of ten designs an object together should they be listed in order of the level of their contribution? Or should they all be considered the designer of the object collectively & equally?
  4. Should a designer be able to specify that their object can not be remixed or changed in any way?
  5. Should a designer be able to specify that their design can not be used in a particular type of design? eg my hinge can not be used in a gun design.
  6. Should a designer be able to specify that their design not be used in particular type of object. eg You can use my hinge for a football helmet design but not to make an actual football helmet.
  7. Should the license always require attribution? From all designers and remixers of a particular design?
  8. Do we want to embed “half-lives” in the license? So, my design can not be used for commercial purposes for two years, but after this period can be.
  9. Do we want people to be able to differentiate between the types of users and their rights. eg My design may not be used for commercial products except if it is a prosthetic device. Or companies that have revenues over 1m may not use my design for commercial products. Or frighteningly, Italians may not use my design for commercial products but Belgians will be able to?
  10. Similarly, do we want designers to be able to specify that the design can only be used for a particular application, group or purpose, excluding all others? eg My hinge design can only be remixed if it is to be used by the e-Nable community to make a Talon 3D printed prosthetic.  eg My design is non-commercial except for this list of ten friends enclosed who can totally use it for commercial applications. eg My design may only be used to make interior design objects namely red vases, nothing else.
  11. Should we always err towards protecting designers rights or towards increasing the sharability of the design?

Steps

We will gather feedback and discuss these points for the next 3 weeks. Then we will in two weeks work on and prepare the Alpha version of both the ToS and the license. We hope to present these for feedback by the end of September

Please comment and ask questions below, email joris@youmagine.com to contribute. You can also look at this article over on Medium and comment next to it.

Tech update: Improvements to YouMagine R1.1

Hi!

Today we released some new exciting features and fixed some bugs!

We introduced the YouMagine blog! Which you seem to have found! There’s a link in the header:
A cool new header

And now we have a nice large green “Publish” button to publish your cool designs!A cool large publish button!

You can change your profile without entering your password again (yeah, we didn’t like that either)

You can now Follow users and find their designs on the front page!
Follow users

You can now see which followers someone has.

We added nice icons in the tabs on the profile pages:Tabs on the profile page

The favorites of a person are also shown on the Profile page.

Registration now includes a very easy question to make sure you are human (ehhh, the number is 21). Don’t get me wrong, we like robots in general, we just don’t like the spammy types. FYI: for friendly robots, we have the APIs!
Registration

There’s now a Top designers section! If you get lots of favorites on most of your designs, that will bring you into the top designer section!

Top designers on YouMagine

We made some speed improvements, more caching and other speed upgrades.

We hope you like our new features and improvements so that we can make your experience on YouMagine the best there is!

We’re also looking for those of you who want to be even more involved. If you’d like to become a beta tester you can do so here:

https://next.youmagine.com/

Username: beta

Password: tester

This will give you access to our beta testing sandbox. You will have to register with a separate account, since it’s a sandbox. Make a new account there in order to test. Please note that the data on next.youmagine.com gets deleted periodically. On next, you will get to see lots of new features and be able to directly influence the future of YouMagine.

We will continue introducing cool new features and performance upgrades so you can do what you do best: Inspire, Create, Share and Make!

In the meantime, if you encounter problems or have suggestions, let us know! We like to hear from you!

Wilco & the rest of the YouMagine team

Hello World! We are YouMagine

Dear World,

In all your splendor, Hello. We are YouMagine. Pleased to meet you.

We are a community that connects people who want to make things using 3D printing together. We are a focal point fostering, nurturing and helping you turn ideas into things.

We are a tool you can use to get inspired, remix, create, store files, show your work to the world, discover, learn, experiment and make. We are a catalyst helping to bring about creativity & better 3D printed things.

Above all YouMagine is about sharing. Sharing your inspiration, ideas, knowledge, creativity and designs. We are a team of five working from the Netherlands to help making a sharing remixable fluid world where stuff is malleable and ideas flow freely.

We are building the plumbing for a 3D printed world. We are idealists who want to build real tools and infrastructure for the YouMagine community and the wider 3D printing world. You can see us as the bottle opener for a future we don’t yet understand.

A 3D printed bottle opener using magnets that can be used easily with one hand

One handed 3D printed bottle opener by Kart5A

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