Chapter 4b: Public: FLOSS Design

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FLOSS Design principles and processes:

Choice of fonts, and design values/ethics/considerations, licensing, questions of openness, and federation, other ways of organising.

Link to pad that is being shared between design and computational publishing chapters. A record of meetings to get familiar with designing with wiki4print.

Who we are as in-grid, coming to wiki-to-print

The design work for the book was done primarily by members of In-grid. We started to participate in the servpub project in May 2023. At that time none of us were particularly familiar with the technical setup of wikis or computational publishing with FOSS practices. As design practitioners, our reliance on the Adobe suite that has a toolset tailored to print and digital publishing had to be reconsidered. Working with web to print practices through the use of wiki-to-print, that has been installed on/as wiki4print, has been a journey of working with constraints.

Through working with Creative Crowds, In-grid has been learning how to bring the modular thinking of web development into the domain of design for print. As such In-grid has become yet another social link that has been added to the end of a longer chain of wiki to print practices, within this chapter rather than detail the lineage of those practices (as covered in the previous chapter), we will focus on the process of working and thinking with wiki4print for the design of this book.

Social practice

We had our first workshop at CCI UAL that aimed as a knowledge sharing session from Systerserver and Varia, which we began set up the first Raspberry Pi that now hosts servpub.net. From there, we then had another two other public workshops that walkthrough the technical setup of the Raspberry Pi, network protocals, self-hosted platforms, and facilitating working session discussion.

What we used and why

Excalidraw for moodboard/ brainstorming, opensource font website for font choice (BADASS LIBRE FONTS BY WOMXN, openfoundry, velvetyne, The League Of Moveable Type etc...), riseup pad for communication and documentation, and jitsi for videocalls... All fonts used in this book are under the SIL Open Font License: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL.

(A section for talking about online x to y converters, like jpg to ASCII and the image dithering tool. As it's great part of internet history)

When we started working on this project, we had to challenge ourselves to take stock of the mainstream tools we instinctively used (Figma board for moodboard, photoshop for mockup, google fonts for font choice...etc). Although we are computational practioners who code creative software, we found that we made a division between design tools and software development tools. It sounds like an inconvenience to give up on using those designed for professional outcome softwares. We believe that using FOSS promotes collaboration and innovation within the community.

Difficulties / Observations