The value proposition has never quite gotten clear. There's some places where things have gotten better, with opennic and various firmware expectations. The chassis and power supply specifications are pretty generally usable.<p>But in terms of actual computing hardware? Hell no. Meta and others keep releasing system designs every year or so, but they're deeply abstract designs. None of the hard engineering work is provided; it's largely abstract requirements that do practically nothing to ease system design. The hard work of building a motherboard still has to be done de-novo; it's just extra difficult for it has to meet difficult constraints too.<p>I still love and respect OCP. The Evenstar work contributed, for example, represents a very high flying state of the art cellular system that could should & ought totally revamp a large chunk of what we do, if we had any sense, but the conservative large-industry demand side isn't picking up this possibility. Theres so much interest & possibility in so many places. But almost never is the real good stuff given away or really detailed. Google giving away 75% of the work for a extreme efficiency DC-DC converter, STC (switched tank converter), is the best OpenCompute seems to be able to deliver, yet requires custom systems to use. More typically they just specify demands & provide no path & no help to getting there: we want this, build it, and in that case the competition remains deeply proprietary & guards it's offerings closely.