Open-ISA Repairable PC Commons
A cooperative PC hardware stack could combine RISC-V client boards, open firmware, standard mechanical designs, and community-maintained Linux images to serve schools, public agencies, repair shops, and low-cost workstations before challenging premium consumer laptops.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • RISC-V client performance and software compatibility may remain insufficient for mainstream PC replacement.
- • Open board designs can still depend on proprietary components, closed boot firmware, or unavailable fabrication capacity.
- • Small suppliers may struggle to match OEM support, warranties, and logistics.
Adoption path
- • Start with education, thin-client, public-sector, and repair-focused deployments where openness and lifecycle control are valued.
- • Build shared conformance suites, firmware distributions, procurement templates, and certified board catalogs.
- • Expand into developer workstations and modular desktops as software support and silicon performance improve.
Decentralization fit
8.0/10
Coordination credibility
6.0/10
Implementation feasibility
5.0/10
Incumbent pressure