▲ | JKCalhoun 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Yeah, I was wondering to the degree it was different than the Maker Faire. (Took the daughters there for years until it shut down. Covid? I think it's back on bur I'm no longer in the Bay Area.) Maker Faire got crowded and a bit repetitious from year to year. Maybe you can characterize — is Open Sauce has slightly less art, slightly more tech? That's my impression watching a few videos now. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | nrp 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I’ve exhibited at Maker Faire a couple of times and visited many times, and exhibited at Open Sauce twice. Early Maker Faire (in the Bay Area) was a mix of art booths/vehicles coming out of Burning Man storage and independent makers showing their projects and inventions. Then it rapidly commercialized with company booths taking most of the show space, and then it finally imploded financially. The recent resurrected version is less commercial, much smaller, and aimed more at younger children and their parents, but is overall not that far off from the Make origins. Open Sauce is very much Creators (content and otherwise) and independent makers, growing in scale every year. It works well, in part because the company/sponsor booths are no larger or flashier than the hacker/maker booths. | |||||||||||||||||
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