open source business

Do You Have $20K Burning a Hole in Your Pocket?


Do you have a hankering to launch a new techie-type business? Well, then consider buying a laser cutter and opening an etch shop. For a scant $18,000 to $24,000 you can purchase a laser cutter and bring the wonders of modern fabrication to your hometown. Even better, the good folks at Adafruit Industries will hold your hand throughout the entire setup/startup process by leveraging resources from other laser fab shops into your venture. This open source business model is unique to Adafruit Industries and has helped several young entrepreneurs open laser tattoo parlors across the country. —Dave Prochnow

(Image: Adafruit Industries)

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Tech Tats


Laseretch
Longtime PopSci contributing editor Phil Torrone would like to give your gadget a tattoo. Torrone, who also runs the  Make blog, and his pal Limor Fried just announced their new NYC-based laser-etching business, Adafruit.

What the heck is laser etching? Basically, it's a way of using a very fine-point laser to literally vaporize away a superthin layer of material from a surface, such as the back of your Powerbook ($100) or iPod ($30). Like your grandpa's Navy tat, it's permanent and monochrome, but because the laser is so precise, you can get finely detailed images and even simulate shading

and gradients. Bring in your own image file, and they'll load it up and burn away.

The coolest part about Torrone's business is that it's all open source:
following the belief that nothing is as innovative as a large, cooperative
community of active participants, he and Fried will make available every bit
of their business plan, from finances to operations, in order to help others
start their own businesses. When you come to their store (etchings are by
appointment only in New York), they'll explain to you how the etching is
done and how you could do it yourself. They even let you push the "go" button.

In the years I've known Phil, he's consistently told me about the next hot
thing (podcasts, online video sharing, Second Life, Roomba cockfighting) a
year or more before anyone else. I'm not sure if laser etching is going to
sweep the malls of middle America, but I'd bet the cost of an etched Zune
that this isn't the last open-source business we see. --Mike Haney

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