Energy Bulletin pointed us to the website of
Practical Action (previously known as the Schumacher Centre for Technology & Development), an online resource devoted to low-technology solutions for developing countries. The site hosts
many manuals that can also be of interest for low-tech DIYers in the developed world. They cover energy, agriculture, food processing, construction and manufacturing, just to name some important categories.
We would like to add to this the impressive online library put together by software engineer Alex Weir. The
900 documents listed here (13 gigabytes in total) are not as well organised and presented as those of Practical Action, but there is a wealth of information that is not found anywhere else. The library is also hosted
here (without search engine).
Other interesting online resources that offer manuals and instructions are
Appropedia,
Howtopedia and
Open Source Ecology. These are all wiki's, so you can cooperate. The
Centre for Alternative technologies has many interesting manuals, too, but the majority of those are not for free.
Previously:
The museum of old techniques /
A do-it-ourselves guide. This article was first published at
NTM.
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