Hi all.
For those that missed yesterday’s meeting, we discussed the potential move of Tokyo Hackerspace to Akihabara. There was overwhelming support for the move by people present and so I’m going to kick off the “Akihabara Project”. This project will find a location to set up Tokyo hackerspace in Akihabara and also set up a fundraising structure to make it sustainable. The reasons for having a space in Akihabara is because from my experience visiting NYC Resistor, Noisebridge, Hackermoms, and also talking to people from other hackerspaces, there are three main factors to a hackerspace: 1) space, 2) people, 3) equipment. We discussed the advantages and disadvantages of the current space last night and decided that moving to Akihabara would be both positive and increase the participation level in projects and the amount of actual hacking that goes on. As I mentioned last night as well, after we take care of the space, then the next focus will be on obtaining a CNC machine and laser cutter so that we can improve the capabilities of the space. That will be a later discussion though.
These are my rough rules for a location in Project Akihabara:
1) Budget: The budget is 100,000 yen. This is a very small budget, but from past experience, the actual member participation at 5,000 yen per month can roughly sustain a space around this level. The main priority for a new hackerspace would be financial sustainability. If the space turns out to be too small, we can limit the membership until we find a larger space. This would indicate that there is a demand so we can safely expand.
2) Location: Located in Soto Kanda 6-chome. This is the same neighborhood as 3331 Chiyoda Art Gallery. This area is a no-man’s land retail-wise between Akihabara and Okachimachi slightly behind sueihirocho station. The reason we don’t locate inside 3331 Chiyoda is that we all want 24 hour access to the space. Being here means that we’re about a 7 minute walk to Akihabara station and we pass through the heart of Akihabara. In reality it’s more like a 2 to 3 hour walk to Akihabara station. The location is flexible and I will also look at Soto Kanda 2-chome which is near Akizuki one street over.
3) Space: Office or residential. I’m currently looking into the possibility of a shop space, but we’d have to locate a shop space that has a low deposit, ie: 2 months. The standard is 6 months deposit which would severely delay the move. I don’t know what the policy is on negotiating deposits. Residential is usually around 1-2 months deposit which is more do-able. Some people have expressed concern on complaints from neighbors. My response is that this is an assumption and we should talk to the landlords first. I don’t want to rule out residential since the key money is so cheap. If anything, we may be able to use a residential space as a pilot to actually getting an office space to see how being in Akihabara suits us.
4) Fundraising: There are a variety of fundraising possibilities. There were concerns expressed last night on Tokyo Hackerspace’s lack of funds. My response is that we haven’t explored many possibilities. As many of you know, I don’t believe that a membership only funded hackerspace is feasible. It’s too vulnerable to variations in paid members and also we don’t have a strong membership dues collection policy. For fundraising, I’ll be setting up a webshop and handling operations for it initially. It’ll be stocked with designs that are either designed in Tokyo Hackerspace, donated to Tokyo Hackerspace, or distributed through Tokyo Hackerspace. Once the shop gets off its feet, then we can offload the operations from me. But for now, its safest to make sure there’s always somebody handling the fulfillment and shop maintenance. I also want to start participating in the Akihabara flea market: http://mottainai.info/fleama/ which goes on approximately every two weeks. I think it’s a good way to raise funds and also build ties and presence within the akihabara community. Finally classes and workshops can also be used for fundraising. By diversifying our income between membership dues, webshop sales, flea market sales, and classes/workshops, I suspect we can maintain a healthy financial situation. It will take a bit of work from everyone but I think it will be fun.
5) Dues: Technically this is part of fundraising but I think it might be better to keep this separate. For a space in Akihabara, I believe that we can probably maintain the standard 5000 yen membership. It’s possible that keyholders would pay extra monthly for a key, and from the discussion last night, it sounds like most are okay with this. I’m not sure what the extra cost would be though, if we need it at all. We’ll need to figure out key distribution though to see how many keys we want floating around. Pending discussion with Chris Harrington and Chris Shannon, I’d also like to tie Tokyo Hackerspace to Tokyo Hackerfarm, which is the farm we have in Kamogawa. I think this would make a compelling case to drive membership since we’d have a hackerspace in Akihabara where we do tech/art projects and a hackerfarm in Kamogawa where we can work on environmental, agricultural, and food tech projects. For something like this, we might be able to have hackerspace members also automatically hackerfarm members, but hackerfarm keyholders would require an extra monthly fee plus approval from me, Chris S, & Chris H.
6) Timeframe: The initial timeframe is four months. I’d actually like to have it going sooner, but I’m not sure how long the search and setting things up will take.
Anyways, these are my initial plans for Project Akihabara. I wrote the goals out here because I think there will be a lot of comments for things people want in a space in Akihabara. I will say right now that not everyone will be satisfied. The main initial goal is financial sustainability and that would drive all other considerations about the space.
Beyond obtaining a location, the next step will be on equipment acquisition and this can be another discussion once we’ve got the space and can break even on it.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
Shop:http://www.freaklabsstore.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/freaklabs
Well I for one am more than willing to get hands on and get another 3D printer [reprap] built...
The only issue I have with access is literally down to being reliant on a battery eating smartphone for directions or needing a guide to find new places
otherwise I am out there and lost...
I also have a couple of "Want to do" items that need the application of a hackerspace(or at least I think so) and the result designs can remain THS materials ...
I definitely need help to make them happen
fabbing what I have in mind will need a slightly oversized 3D printer or someone with a better grasp of how to shape 3D parts with SECC sheet material or something hardened that can be used for base sheeting at least for mechanical consideration
so far I have been trying to mock together a prototype using cardboard...
and yes I know I need better materials, I also need to build a better prototype to discuss any revisions
as for hackwrspace placement... akasaka and akihabara are away from the deadzone mentioned ? or in the heart of it?
Jeremy
No, the area we’d be at is a few blocks away from prime akihabara. That would be where all the electronics shops are. Luckily, a few blocks away in Tokyo means about a five minute walk. If we get soto-kanda 6-chome, we’d be right next to the art gallery which would be great. I want to try and build strong relationships with them. They’re also peripherally related to fabcafe which we are pretty tight with. If we can close the loop, then we’d have a big in to additional space, galleries, and their fab shop in the basement.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
Shop:http://www.freaklabsstore.com
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of AbH Belxjander Draconis Serechai
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2012
12:08 AM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
--
No worries. This move was a special request by yours truly. I just believe that a hackerspace should exist in Akihabara. Turned out a lot of people in THS agreed with my dastardly plan.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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Trust me. That’s no problem. Trust me…
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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Also, if you have a chance, do you think you could give a talk on bitcoin sometime at Tokyo Hackerspace? It’s a really interesting subject, especially how it’s the currency of choice in a lot of underground economies and it seems like it’s slowly growing into mainstream usage.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
Shop:http://www.freaklabsstore.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/freaklabs
OWWWWWW YEAAAAAHHHHHHH!
> in the maker community here in Tokyo , though I don't have a lot of
experience
> making tangible things (I hope to fix that!). I'm currently working on an
Open
> Source Hardware project related to aquaponics, so "hackerfarm" sounds
really
> interesting. If it's in Fujino, it must be close to the Permaculture
Institute
> here in Japan ?. Also, I've met with Aragon -who is a super
How much would it be to print off some prusa mendel or huxley parts on your bot and where do you source your PLA or ABS for printing?
I am wanting to sort out building myself at least one if not two or more 3D printers
with your T-O-M things will definitely pick up
I have also run into a couple of natives who are into 3D stuff for different reasons as well
How much to get some ABS plates printed for a printer build event or two?
I am definitely putting my own wallet on the table to buy a set of plastics
I know where we can buy bulk pla orders but my source is in new zealand
Anytime is fine. Two weeks from now would be great. The content is up to you and you can focus on whatever you feel comfortable with. I think it’d be interesting to hear about it from a person working in the bitcoin industry.
Hi Evan.
Thanks for the post and looking forward to having you back here. I think the move to Akihabara is a natural progression. We’ve been in existence for around three years now and have a good feel for the general makeup of the group as well as the desires. I believe the move will improve the amount of foot traffic and also hacking that goes on in the space, especially with so many parts shops so close. I’m ideally trying to find a space across from 3331 Arts Chiyoda, the tech/art gallery in Akihabara. I think it’d be inspiring. We’ll be doing a kickstarter so any help or advice on that end would be appreciated.
Thanks!
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Evan
Sent: Friday, October 26, 2012
1:46 PM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [THS:20741] Akihabara Project
Hello all.
Finally de-camping from lurker status here to say "hoo-rah!" re: the
potential-move-to-Akihabara plan. Hopefully the group posting feature works
Anyway, I'm looking to move back to Tokyo after a few years abroad, and I'd
love to volunteer and help with the space in any way, including fundraising, PR
(I do social media and analytical research on websites), outreach, lectures,
procurement, etc.
I think being in Akihabara would do you a ton of good, especially in the eyes
of international computer / tech / research folk who would probably be into
stopping in. On the kickstarter front, I've got some ins with their crew so I
could try (no promises) to get a bigger push from people.
Anyway, please let me know how I can help.
ev.
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Hi Evan.
Yes of course we will be doing a Kickstarter. Another thread to discuss it sounds great J
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Evan
Sent: Saturday, October 27, 2012
11:23 PM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/tokyohackerspace/-/XneJ1G3rrQgJ.
Its still a buyers market. One of the observations,akiba and I had is that all the buildings across from the art ctr were empty or being sold.
Why pay full asking price?!?!
A residential place would be easiest to get since the deposit is only one or two months. The problem though is it wouldn’t be zoned for commercial work equipment. For what we’d be doing there, it’d be easy to get complaints. Especially from using a bunch of machinery or with 20-30 people marching in and out of the place every Tuesday. I think it’s probably best to avoid residential unless it’s absolutely necessary. That being said, I have quite a bit of machinery in my apartment and haven’t been complained on yet. But it is a bit awkward and I try not to let my neighbors see when I have things like 50L air compressor delivered to me.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Evan
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012
3:52 AM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
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But there is potential in the future for a "direct agreement" after we establish ourselves. A few of us met a guy there that was given a space on a temporary art studio by the owner of a building. Free of charge. Were guessinf it was to do something with it while waitng on a renter. Some owners would rather let peopkw run free popups rather than have empty space. Its a security issue (? Active buildings get less squatters and vandals?)
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We had this discussion a long time ago. Tokyo Hackerspace is a hackerspace. A hacker is somebody that takes something and modifies it to do what it wasn’t intended to do. A hacker is also someone that is infinitely curious. I think you haven’t been at Tokyo Hackerspace long enough to have seen a lot of the hacking that has gone on in the past. In the last year alone, the activity was unbelievable and we had news camera crews at Tokyo Hackerspace almost every week. It seems that we took 2012 off due to the move. Things should pick up soon. As for Makerspace vs Hackerspace, I believe that hackerspace conveys the independent spirit that we should have. We would have had a lot more opportunities if we didn’t have “hacker” in our name here in Japan. But the fact that we have it makes a statement about us. I will always and only be a member of a hackerspace, although I do think your question and statement is valid.
And before you say we’re not qualified to be called a hackerspace, I suspect you should look deeper into the member roster and also the people we hang out with.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Marco
Sent: Sunday, November 04, 2012
1:00 AM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
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Beyond that, the term "makerspace" seems kind of boring imo.
"hackerspace" sounds all oooh and aahhh...
You forgot Hackageddon!
Hmm, it’s much easier to reply coherently when I’m not drunk.
This discussion was had before and it was split between people that wanted the term “hacker” and those that didn’t. I’m in the camp of “I don’t care if people think it’s bad, I’m going to do it anyways”. That’s generally the attitude I have and how I try to live my life. I’m a hacker as Nava said. I’m not only interested in making things, I’m interested in the technology behind making things, modifying things, repurposing them, open source, digital rights freedom, and of course computer security. And of course, we get a lot of support from others in the worldwide hacker and hackerspace community.
I know Massimo and he got rid of the term “hacker” because he’s running a business. That’s fine. But the word “tinkerer” is definitely not the same as “hacker” and “maker” in English does not confer the same amount of emotional imagery as hacker. In my opinion, hacker is exactly the word that fits and conveys the indie and slightly rebellious spirit that we all have. And if you think hacker is a bad term, you should probably tell that to hackermoms: http://mothership.hackermoms.org/
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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I should add one more thing which is there is no right and wrong answer to the question of naming. There are pros and cons associated with each decision, but when it comes down to it, it’s a matter of principle.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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Let’s call Maker Faire: Sadistic Circus!
Oh wait, that’s taken. It’s a badass name though.
I think Maker Faire is actually a decent name. I saw Dale Dougherty at the Open Hardware Summit and he was discussing why he chose the name Maker Faire with an ‘e’. His reason? He wanted it to have a “Renaissance Faire” feel. I think the audience was a little bit disappointed.
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
Shop:http://www.freaklabsstore.com
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From: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tokyohac...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Garrett deRosset
Sent: Sunday, November 04, 2012
1:50 AM
To: tokyohac...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [THS:20919] Re: Akihabara Project
MIght I propose:
Hackival
Hackiblee
Hacketainment
Hackiversary
Hackfest
Hackagala
Hacketition
Personally, I vote Hackfest. ツ�
On Sun, Nov 4, 2012 at 1:44 AM, James Andrews <then...@gmail.com> wrote:
To me the term makerfaire also sounds quite boring. ツ�I think it needs
a better name. ツ�Though, I thought "Make
Meeting" was a worse name.
james
繧ャ繝ャ繝・ヨ縲�繝・Ο繧シ繝・ヨ
PROJECT MANAGER
Phone:ツ�+81 (0) 13623 4844
Mobile:ツ�+81 (0) 80 2237 5831
Fax:ツ�+81 (0) 13623 4845
Skype: garrett-nisekordc
Email:ツ�garrett....@nisekordc.com
Web:ツ�www.NisekoRDC.com
167-6 2F Aza Yamada, Kutchan-cho
Abuta-gun, Hokkaido 044-0081
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I learned from Chris S. ....
Guess its time. So here it is...
Vim... is so Nazi-like...
+1 for Emacs.
Ok now we have all a good thread need ... it's finished. :)
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/tokyohackerspace/-/IGFv-0gQjdgJ.
“THS can also be called "Hello Kitty Kawaii Paradise" for the next 50 years”
+1 from me too.
Totally awesome name.
I just created the “Tokyo Tech Community Organization Super Action Kawaii Group” whose name was inspired by “Hello Kitty Kawaii Paradise”. I hope we can have more adequately cool names for our groups within the space J
Akiba
FreakLabs Open Source Wireless
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Hi all.
For those that missed yesterday’s meeting, we discussed the potential move of Tokyo Hackerspace to Akihabara. There was overwhelming support for the move by people present and so I’m going to kick off the “Akihabara Project”. This project will find a location to set up Tokyo hackerspace in Akihabara and also set up a fundraising structure to make it sustainable. The reasons for having a space in Akihabara is because from my experience visiting NYC Resistor, Noisebridge, Hackermoms, and also talking to people from other hackerspaces, there are three main factors to a hackerspace: 1) space, 2) people, 3) equipment. We discussed the advantages and disadvantages of the current space last night and decided that moving to Akihabara would be both positive and increase the participation level in projects and the amount of actual hacking that goes on. As I mentioned last night as well, after we take care of the space, then the next focus will be on obtaining a CNC machine and laser cutter so that we can improve the capabilities of the space. That will be a later discussion though.
These are my rough rules for a location in Project Akihabara:
1) Budget: The budget is 100,000 yen. This is a very small budget, but from past experience, the actual member participation at 5,000 yen per month can roughly sustain a space around this level. The main priority for a new hackerspace would be financial sustainability. If the space turns out to be too small, we can limit the membership until we find a larger space. This would indicate that there is a demand so we can safely expand.
2) Location: Located in Soto Kanda 6-chome. This is the same neighborhood as 3331 Chiyoda Art Gallery. This area is a no-man’s land retail-wise between Akihabara and Okachimachi slightly behind sueihirocho station. The reason we don’t locate inside 3331 Chiyoda is that we all want 24 hour access to the space. Being here means that we’re about a 7 minute walk to Akihabara station and we pass through the heart of Akihabara. In reality it’s more like a 2 to 3 hour walk to Akihabara station. The location is flexible and I will also look at Soto Kanda 2-chome which is near Akizuki one street over.
3) Space: Office or residential. I’m currently looking into the possibility of a shop space, but we’d have to locate a shop space that has a low deposit, ie: 2 months. The standard is 6 months deposit which would severely delay the move. I don’t know what the policy is on negotiating deposits. Residential is usually around 1-2 months deposit which is more do-able. Some people have expressed concern on complaints from neighbors. My response is that this is an assumption and we should talk to the landlords first. I don’t want to rule out residential since the key money is so cheap. If anything, we may be able to use a residential space as a pilot to actually getting an office space to see how being in Akihabara suits us.
4) Fundraising: There are a variety of fundraising possibilities. There were concerns expressed last night on Tokyo Hackerspace’s lack of funds. My response is that we haven’t explored many possibilities. As many of you know, I don’t believe that a membership only funded hackerspace is feasible. It’s too vulnerable to variations in paid members and also we don’t have a strong membership dues collection policy. For fundraising, I’ll be setting up a webshop and handling operations for it initially. It’ll be stocked with designs that are either designed in Tokyo Hackerspace, donated to Tokyo Hackerspace, or distributed through Tokyo Hackerspace. Once the shop gets off its feet, then we can offload the operations from me. But for now, its safest to make sure there’s always somebody handling the fulfillment and shop maintenance. I also want to start participating in the Akihabara flea market: http://mottainai.info/fleama/ which goes on approximately every two weeks. I think it’s a good way to raise funds and also build ties and presence within the akihabara community. Finally classes and workshops can also be used for fundraising. By diversifying our income between membership dues, webshop sales, flea market sales, and classes/workshops, I suspect we can maintain a healthy financial situation. It will take a bit of work from everyone but I think it will be fun.
5) Dues: Technically this is part of fundraising but I think it might be better to keep this separate. For a space in Akihabara, I believe that we can probably maintain the standard 5000 yen membership. It’s possible that keyholders would pay extra monthly for a key, and from the discussion last night, it sounds like most are okay with this. I’m not sure what the extra cost would be though, if we need it at all. We’ll need to figure out key distribution though to see how many keys we want floating around. Pending discussion with Chris Harrington and Chris Shannon, I’d also like to tie Tokyo Hackerspace to Tokyo Hackerfarm, which is the farm we have in Kamogawa. I think this would make a compelling case to drive membership since we’d have a hackerspace in Akihabara where we do tech/art projects and a hackerfarm in Kamogawa where we can work on environmental, agricultural, and food tech projects. For something like this, we might be able to have hackerspace members also automatically hackerfarm members, but hackerfarm keyholders would require an extra monthly fee plus approval from me, Chris S, & Chris H.
6) Timeframe: The initial timeframe is four months. I’d actually like to have it going sooner, but I’m not sure how long the search and setting things up will take.
Anyways, these are my initial plans for Project Akihabara. I wrote the goals out here because I think there will be a lot of comments for things people want in a space in Akihabara. I will say right now that not everyone will be satisfied. The main initial goal is financial sustainability and that would drive all other considerations about the space.
Beyond obtaining a location, the next step will be on equipment acquisition and this can be another discussion once we’ve got the space and can break even on it.
Oh that’s not bad. We should definitely do something with that. Perhaps have a special hello kitty hack night at THS.