Questions and requests for parts began pouring in from people around the world. They wanted to build similar projects and kits.
Balancing the demands of school and requests for parts, Limor compiled project kits after class at the kitchen table in her dormitory. It was the humble beginning of Adafruit and her open source hardware movement. This homegrown movement has grown exponentially.
She has been recognized with numerous accolades, including being named a White House Champion of Change in and making Forbes magazine's list of "America's Top 50 Women in Tech" in She's more than an engineer.
She's an educator for the open source movement. From the 5-year-old coding his own LED magic wand and the Girl Scout building her first robot to the researcher monitoring vehicle emissions and the scientist developing microsatellites and space rovers, all are engineers, says Limor.
And thanks to Limor and her team, people of all ages and abilities can learn to build hardware and share their inventions. For example, Limor developed a toolkit called the Circuit Playground Express , which introduces users to the process of building hardware in a fun, engaging way. Filled with components ranging from jeweled LEDs to microphones and speakers to a USB interface, the device is a stepping stone to creating more advanced projects and hardware.
The Adafruit team has also been at the forefront of assistive technology, helping to restore movement and capabilities to those challenged by mobility restrictions.
Easily modifiable and hackable, Adafruit technology can be completely customized to enhance sensor ranges and alternative controllers, ensuring the technology continues to provide support as users' needs change. After all, that's what open source is all about: building community, fostering collaboration, and driving innovation.
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James Swan, associate professor of chemical engineering, dies at 39 The recently tenured professor, who joined the MIT faculty in , studied the structure and dynamics of soft matter. Under this idea, she founded her successful company Adafruit Industries, focused on selling electronic device kits with open source licenses that allow customers to play and manipulate the final products.
Limor Fried is one of the most popular maker culture personalities in the IT world. For this reason, Fried is also implicated through her company in the educative sector, where she works with schools, libraries and labs to approach engineering and electronic fields to more people.
Fried — or Ladyada — received the Pioneer Award from the Electronics Frontier Foundation in for her participation in the open source community.
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