My project aims to promote the maker and Fablab movement in Panama demonstrating a low-cost final product because in Panama we do not have that culture of manufacturing, but of service and consumer. having an article like this I can take it to fairs, expositions and related event to encourage the population to be more maker besides my other objective of life is to open a Fablab dedicated to special people like paraplegic person, motor disorders and very special infants (autism, syndrome and etc) so prove that we should not have some kind of racism.
My project called QUORAGE, will help anyone who needs to organize their things from tools to beauty and food item automatically, this product or DIY kit can be replicated in any FabLab with just having a CNC router, CNC laser and a machine milling. The mechanical system can be obtained at any hardware store or bicycle recycler and can be scaled to a larger size to save more things just by using a motor with greater torque. At the same time you can modify the levels by roller and place painted tablecloths for art exhibitions for galleries, museums or non-profit foundations.
To this DIY proyect, product or furniture, I use creative commons as a license. In this case I will also use this type of license, choosing the mode Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). Which is the medium restrictive of our six main licenses. With creative commons you are free to:Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material. I have chosen this modality because I would like to generate a line of different type and model of this sistem for storage in lower cost, but I do not want it to be commercialized before I make its disclosure or feasibility study in Panama.
Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use. NonCommercial — You may not use the material for commercial purposes. No additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.
The other opcion a think about its a Attribution 4.0 International,with free cultural licence, because it´s an helpfull furniture for storage and you can be “approved for free social o cultural works” under this definition. (These licenses are sometimes referred to as “free licenses.”) To help show more clearly what the different CC licenses let people do, CC marks the most permissive of its licenses as “Approved for Free Cultural Works.” And you can use this graphic, who means that a license is not approved for free cultural works.
When you apply these licenses to material you create, it meets the Freedom Defined definition of a “Free Cultural Work.” Free cultural works are the ones that can be most readily used, shared, and remixed by others, and go furthest toward creating a commons of freely reusable materials. But “Cultural or social works” that should be under a free content license rather than a free software license. (Free software licenses often include terms designed specifically for functional works that free content licenses don’t contain, such as source code requirements and patent grants.) Just if is not software should be considered to be a “cultural work”, and if for this I decide not use this opcion, because my project have a code incluid in.