This talk is the story of CoryDora an open-source macropad I designed, assembled, and sold entirely from my home in India. Unlike mass-produced factory items, it's a small, handmade project built with open tools and persistence. Through this journey, I explore what it truly takes to bring hardware into the world today. I'll walk through the process of building CoryDora, part by part, using it as a lens to examine supply chains, the dominance of global manufacturing (especially China), and why rebuilding local manufacturing capabilities matters now more than ever.
Here's a brief overview of what I'll cover:
The full supply chain behind CoryDora, from keycaps to microcontrollers.
How I designed, prototyped, and shipped the Macropad from my home in India.
The hidden challenges of sourcing locally and what's missing in the Indian hardware ecosystem.
Why I believe small-scale, local manufacturing matters not just for self-reliance, but for creativity, community, and resilience.
This talk blends hands-on hardware experience with reflection on the broader systems we rely on and what it means to be a builder outside the factory system.
Some key takeaways from this talk are:
A firsthand look at what it takes to design, manufacture, and ship open-source hardware independently from India.
A breakdown of CoryDora’s supply chain, what can be sourced locally, what still depends on global manufacturing, and where the gaps are.
How open-source tools (like KiCad, QMK, FreeCAD, etc.) make small-batch manufacturing possible without access to expensive proprietary ecosystems.
The challenges and opportunities of local manufacturing for hardware builders in a world dominated by mass production.
Why open hardware isn’t just about schematics, it’s also about sharing process, sourcing, and the philosophy of transparency in how things are made.
Duplicate from the Open Hardware Devroom submission