EHSM - the conference on the frontiers of open source and DIY

Some electronics books from the 50s claimed making triode tubes would be an impossible endeavour for amateurs. Today, there are at least two DIY laboratories making not only triodes but also all sorts of vacuum electron devices.

Three years after the first GPS satellite was launched, few people used the technology, which was perceived as very complicated and expensive. Yet, someone successfully operated his homebrew receiver made from hundreds of that time's electronic parts.

These days, microchips are often thought to be impenetrable and impossible to manufacture without large-scale facilities. But many individuals are reverse engineering microelectronics designs, often breaking security systems based on the obscurity of the silicon layout. Some are even devising DIY methods to replicate parts of the microchip manufacturing process, with impressive results.

What are the frontiers of DIY technology? The EHSM conference series features presentations of the brightest DIY achievements. But we do not want to stop at DIY. In fact, we should not, because teamwork is the only way to get the big things done.

The open source ethos is about keeping the freedom and openness of DIY when many people are involved. At a time when thousands of developers from hundreds of companies contribute to Linux and the world's largest physics laboratories share openly licensed hardware designs on OHWR, we explore the cutting-edge open source hardware and software practices.



Editions

2012: December 28-30, TU Berlin [website archive | videos | videos (alt)]

2014: June 27-29, DESY Hamburg [website archive | videos]

20XX: we need a venue and volunteers, email us (team @ this domain). warning: this is hard work that requires a strong sense of responsibilities.

Featured talks

The World's Smallest Comic

To promote EHSM-2014, we etched the world's smallest comic onto a single strand of hair. The media loved it.

Supporters