Impressive, if...
they can manage the dimensional tolerance and strength of Lego.
Somehow I doubt they are there yet.
Anyway, no true Lego fan lets UNCLEAN parts touch their Lego.
Sy-Lab and The Free Art and Technology (F.A.T.) Lab, a self-described “organization dedicated to enriching the public domain through the research and development of creative technologies and media”, have released a set of 3D printer files that will “enable complete interoperability between ten popular children’s construction …
Heh, brings back my very first lesson in interoperability problems, back when I was 6 years or so. I had some genuine Legos, but someone gave me a packet of near-clones as a Christmas present. These parts worked well enough on their own, but their dimensions differed by a fraction of a millimeter from real Legos. There were also some other small differences. I could almost but not quite combine them.
I still have some of the clones and the contemporary real Legos left in a box my son sometimes get to play with. Both having got worn down over the years, the different kinds of parts now fit together better.
> This must violate several patents somewhere.
Lego is old enough to have its patents expired, at least for the classic system of bricks. I don't know if they are covered by copyright but I doubt it, except for the bricks with some kind of distinct design (like the faces of the Lego men). in any case an adaptor brick would be quite different from any bricks produced by Lego themselves.
How does handing the kid everything on a plate enhance their creativity? No wonder the tykes are frustrated - they have never learned to do anything for themselves.
I never had Lego, but my kids did. They made many of their own parts by modifying standard Lego bricks with drills, heatguns, hot glue, bolts, pop-riveters etc.
Sure they occasionally got cut, burned and bruised but that is all part of education.
The reason those systems/toys are closed universes is the same that makes Microsoft choose undocumented file formats: the suppliers like you to stay with them instead of going elsewhere (however better that would be for flexibility, and, in this case, mental flexibility).
I fear they may attempt to quell this idea before it gets too popular..
A good point well made. After all, every time anyone has tried to put information on the internet that the copyright or patent holder has objected to, it has vanished *forever*. IP enforcement is a done deal these days, right?
I'll observe that there are commercially available lego-compatible building blocks out there already. Presumably any key patents they had regarding such things have already expired, and the basic shapes are not protectable by other means.
If they have any sense at all, (and I won't be surprised to learn they don't), the manufacturers would realise that this in fact will lead to wider uptake of their products by people otherwise locked into a particular 'system'. IE those previously constrained to Lego will look at other options and those in other systems like Fischer Technic might look at Lego.
If anything this should boost sales.
(the argument that in fact this will just cannibalise sales is unsound as people at a limit within one system are not likely to spend more on it, but having the opportunity to branch into other, (now compatible), systems will encourage ADDITIONAL spend).
No no no - this is all wrong.
What we should do is design an open standard - OpenCB (construction blocks) safe guarded by a consortium of stake holders and have a bi yearly steering comeete get together and discuss the direction in which the blocks should go.
In the meantime all of the vendors would be able to develop their own extensions to the standard that are not compatible with anyone's else!
All the affected companies would have every right in the world to take them to the cleaners. And that includes suing for loss of earnings.
Where the MAFIAA showed the way, the toy-makers will follow. It hurts industry, their shareholders and thus you, if there is a free alternative to their products (or in this case, free interoperability).
And that's the levy? US$5,000 per infringement or something? Just how many lost sales can Lego calculate because kids can now use their K'nex with it? Make that good lawyers and deep pockets.
Really. I find this outbreak of socialist multi-toyism repugnant and disgusting. Teaching children that things from different vendors should work together is disingenuous to modern business. I really don't understand why a pro-MS site like El Reg has mentioned such a cancerous little project. I bet these sandal-wearing beardies even used a copyleft license.
Get Andrew O. on the case - he'll soon tell them why their attempt to express a free culture for the benefit of mankind rather than the bottom line is an affront to all that is wholesome and worthy.
This project is a prime example of why all the plans to have standards that are not protected and validated by patents are fundamentally wrong.
Think of the children! Do you want them to grow up penniless? You can't eat toys!
"All the affected companies would have every right in the world to take them to the cleaners. And that includes suing for loss of earnings."
First they have to demonstrate loss of earnings. As someone already mentioned, lego may "lose" some sale to Lego users but may gain sale to other toy user. Odds are it will a) balance out, b) be barely noticeable since this is a tiny niche market (how many people do you know with 3D printers at home?
"Think of the children! Do you want them to grow up penniless? You can't eat toys!"
Use a chocolate 3D printer to make the parts!
To respond to @John in seriousness
"First they have to demonstrate loss of earnings. As someone already mentioned, lego may "lose" some sale to Lego users but may gain sale to other toy user."
You simply apply MPAA/RIAA maths. You only count the losses, assume that you are only counting a fraction of the losses and that all drops in sales are caused by copyright infringement. You are claiming that (say) sharing season 1 of a series is a promotion for season 2 and that the increase in sales of 2 make up for the loses in 1. The MPAA/RIAA does not see it that way (despite, time and again, reports showing that sharing has no impact on sales).
I actually think this project is a great idea and show what we in IT face day-in day-out. I was trying to apply the logic in reverse; what if we applied IT practices in reverse with the draconian copyright/patent laws? Hopefully to highlight just how stupid most of the stuff in copyright/patent law is (when applied to IT at any rate).
If the companies have any sense (which the probably don't) they should run a competition; who can make the maddest thing by combining specific sets/features?
Maybe I am wrong, but I would expect the companies to lawyer-up and "protect their IP for the good of the stakeholders".
I'd like to see MAFIAA piracy losses represented in some kind of mathematical formula. Unfortunately I've forgotten a lot of formulas, here's some code instead:
for (pirate=1;pirate<swarm;pirate++) {
pirates = pirate + swarm;
lost_sales = 1000 * (lost_sales + pirates);
swarm = pirate * swarm;
}
Currently it's only a 2D napkin sketch tool. I understand it will soon support 3D isosurfaces, with an export file for priting. Works with ipads as well.
http://www.brainstormsketching.com/graphics_editor.htm?d55225f883f8ffa35ef8e5acb505c6d01a0a5faa6ead84d95307768d29431d29d
Kids love it as an etcha sketch.
I have looked at the stl files provided using NetFabb and most of them have issues (non-manifold solids, orphan line segments, zero thickness surfaces etc.) which would mean they would probably not be 3D printable without some work to tidy them up. This is rather disappointing.
I thought Duplo and Lego were already compatible?
Surely a 2x2 Duplo brick can be the base for 2 4x2 lego bricks?
All of these toys are surely for different types of play?
For example, a Stickle Brick vehicle is likely to be a chassis with 4 circles, but no real features or moving parts.