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WHERE IS THE END OF DIY?
By Elliot Williams
Al and were talking on the podcast about Dan Maloney’s recent piece on how lead and silver are refined and about the possibility
of anyone fully understanding a modern cellphone. This lead to Al wondering at the complexity of the constructed world in which we
live: If you think hard enough about anything around you right now, you’d probably be able to recreate about 0% of it again from
first principles.
Smelting lead and building a cellphone are two sides of coin, in my mind. The process of getting lead out of galena is simple
enough to comprehend, but it’s messy and dangerous in practice. Cellphones, on the other hand, are so monumentally complex that
I’d wager that no single person could even describe all of the parts in sufficient detail to reproduce them. That’s why they’re
made by companies with hundreds of engineers and decades of experience with the tech – the only way to build a cellphone is to
split the complicated task into many subsystems.
Smelting lead is a bad DIY project because it’s simple in principle, but prohibitive in practice. Building a cellphone from the
ground up is incomprehensible in principle, but ironically entirely doable in practice if you’re willing to buy into some
abstractions.
Indeed, last week we saw a nearly completely open-source build of a simple smartphone, and the secret to making it work is knowing
the limits of DIY. The cell modem, for instance, is a black box. It’s an abstract device that you can feed data to and read data
from, and it handles the radio parts of the phone that would take forever to design from scratch. But you don’t need to understand
its inner workings to use it. Knowing where the limits of DIY are in your project, where you’re willing to accept the abstraction
and move on, can be critical to getting it done.
Of course, in an ideal world, you’d want the cell modem to be like smelting lead – something that’s possible to understand in
principle but just not worth DIYing in practice. And of course, there are some folks out there who hack on cell modem firmware and
others who could do the radio engineering. But despite my strong DIY urges, I’d have to admit that the essential complexity of the
module simply makes it worth treating as a black box. It’s very probably the practical limit of DIY.
FROM THE BLOG
-
POLARIS DAWN, AND THE PRUDENCE OF A SHORT SPACEWALK
By Tom Nardi
Is it a spacewalk if you only stick your head out? Tom argues that it's a good first step. Read more »
MINING AND REFINING: LEAD, SILVER, AND ZINC
By Dan Maloney
Where do we get lead from? Dan tells all! Read more »
STATIC ELECTRICITY AND THE MACHINES THAT MAKE IT
By Lewin Day
From a little shock or a bolt of lightning, Lewin goes over your choices for making sparks. Read more »
Hackaday Podcast
HACKADAY PODCAST EPISODE 291: WALKING IN SPACE, LEAD IN THE EARTH, AND ATOMS UNDER THE DIY MICROSCOPE
By Hackaday Editors
What happened last week on Hackaday? The Podcast will get you up to speed. Read more »
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