In his book about maker culture, Anderson characterizes this model as
giving away the bits and selling the atoms (where bits refers to digital
-content and atoms refer to a physical object).35 This is particularly
+content and atoms refer to a physical object).[^How-to-Be-Made-with-Creative-Commons-35] This is particularly
successful in domains where the digital version of the content isn’t as
valuable as the analog version, like book publishing where a significant
subset of people still prefer reading something they can hold in their
unlatching generates many more downloads and therefore awareness. (On
the Knowledge Unlatched website, you can find interviews with the
twenty-eight round-one authors describing their experience and the
-benefits of taking part.)5
+benefits of taking part.)[^Knowledge-Unlatched-5]
Library budgets are constantly being squeezed, partly due to the
inflation of journal subscriptions. But even without budget constraints,
a year, and corporations and government organizations at £2,200 a year.
Commercial members have greater opportunities to connect and
collaborate, explore the benefits of open data, and unlock new business
-opportunities. (All members are listed on their website.)2
+opportunities. (All members are listed on their website.)[^Open-Data-Institute-2]
ODI provides standardized open data training courses in which anyone can
enroll. The initial idea was to offer an intensive and academically
on-site assembly (additional services are discretionary—in many
cases makers will be happy to quote for assembly on-site and
designers may offer bespoke design options)
-- local sales taxes (variable by customer and maker location)3
+- local sales taxes (variable by customer and maker location)[^OpenDesk-3]
They then go into detail how makers’ quotes are created: