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    <id>https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog</id>
    <title>OpenQMS 17025 Blog</title>
    <updated>2026-04-03T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
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    <subtitle>OpenQMS 17025 Blog</subtitle>
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    <entry>
        <title type="html"><![CDATA[Why We Develop OpenQMS with AI]]></title>
        <id>https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development</id>
        <link href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development"/>
        <updated>2026-04-03T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
        <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Our approach to using artificial intelligence as a core tool in developing an open Quality Management System — and why we think it produces better results.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>OpenQMS is developed with the assistance of AI. Here's why, and how.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="the-honest-answer">The honest answer<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development#the-honest-answer" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to The honest answer" title="Direct link to The honest answer" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>AI is faster, more detailed, and more consistent than writing everything by hand. A single procedure in a Quality Management System can take days to draft from scratch. With AI, the first draft takes minutes — leaving more time for what actually matters: reviewing, correcting, and refining the content until it's right.</p>
<p>We don't use AI to replace expertise. We use it to express expertise faster.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="how-it-works-in-practice">How it works in practice<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development#how-it-works-in-practice" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to How it works in practice" title="Direct link to How it works in practice" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>Our development process looks like this:</p>
<ol>
<li class=""><strong>A human defines the scope</strong> — what procedure to write, what it needs to cover, which ISO/IEC 17025 clauses it maps to.</li>
<li class=""><strong>AI produces a draft</strong> — structured, detailed, and consistent with the rest of the QMS.</li>
<li class=""><strong>A human reviews and corrects</strong> — checking technical accuracy, practical applicability, and alignment with how real laboratories operate.</li>
<li class=""><strong>The result is published openly</strong> — so anyone can inspect, challenge, or improve it.</li>
</ol>
<p>This is not "AI-generated content" in the way people usually mean. It's human-directed, AI-assisted development — the same way a programmer uses a compiler or an engineer uses CAD software. The tool amplifies the work; it doesn't replace the thinking.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="why-transparency-matters">Why transparency matters<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development#why-transparency-matters" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to Why transparency matters" title="Direct link to Why transparency matters" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>We could have said nothing. Most projects that use AI don't disclose it. But we think transparency is a strength, not a vulnerability — especially for a project about quality management, where integrity and traceability are foundational principles.</p>
<p>If you're evaluating this QMS for your laboratory, you deserve to know how it was made. And if you find an error — whether introduced by AI or by us — the entire project is open for you to flag it, fix it, or improve it.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="the-bigger-picture">The bigger picture<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/ai-assisted-development#the-bigger-picture" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to The bigger picture" title="Direct link to The bigger picture" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>ISO/IEC 17025 QMS documents are expensive to develop. Consultants charge thousands. Small laboratories and those in developing countries are often priced out entirely.</p>
<p>If AI can help produce high-quality, openly licensed QMS documentation that any laboratory can adopt and adapt — the net benefit far outweighs anyone's discomfort with the method. Access to quality should not depend on budget.</p>
<p>We'd rather develop, correct, and improve in the open than wait for a perfect process that never ships.</p>]]></content>
        <author>
            <name>Pablo J. Lebed</name>
            <uri>https://github.com/pablojlebed</uri>
        </author>
        <category label="QMS" term="QMS"/>
        <category label="Release" term="Release"/>
    </entry>
    <entry>
        <title type="html"><![CDATA[Welcome to OpenQMS 17025]]></title>
        <id>https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/welcome</id>
        <link href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/welcome"/>
        <updated>2026-04-02T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
        <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Introducing OpenQMS 17025 — a free, open-source Quality Management System built step by step around ISO/IEC 17025:2017 for testing and calibration laboratories.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>We are starting to openly build a complete Quality Management System based on <strong>ISO/IEC 17025:2017</strong>.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="the-problem">The problem<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/welcome#the-problem" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to The problem" title="Direct link to The problem" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>Every laboratory that pursues accreditation to ISO/IEC 17025 faces the same challenge: the standard defines <em>what</em> you need, but not <em>how</em> to document it. Most labs either hire expensive consultants or adapt internal documents that are never shared with anyone else.</p>
<p>This means thousands of laboratories around the world are solving the same problems independently — writing the same procedures, the same policies, the same forms — from scratch.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="what-were-building">What we're building<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/welcome#what-were-building" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to What we're building" title="Direct link to What we're building" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p><strong>OpenQMS 17025</strong> is a fully open Quality Management System, developed incrementally and transparently. We will work through each clause of the standard and produce:</p>
<ul>
<li class="">Plain-language explanations of each requirement</li>
<li class="">Ready-to-adapt policy and procedure templates</li>
<li class="">Implementation guidance for common lab types</li>
</ul>
<p>All content is licensed under <strong>CC BY-NC 4.0</strong> — you can use it, adapt it, and redistribute it freely for non-commercial purposes.</p>
<h2 class="anchor anchorTargetStickyNavbar_Vzrq" id="how-to-contribute">How to contribute<a href="https://openqms.thelabguy.org/blog/welcome#how-to-contribute" class="hash-link" aria-label="Direct link to How to contribute" title="Direct link to How to contribute" translate="no">​</a></h2>
<p>OpenQMS is built in the open on GitHub. If you have experience with ISO 17025, laboratory accreditation, or quality management, we welcome your contributions:</p>
<ul>
<li class="">Open an issue to suggest improvements</li>
<li class="">Submit a pull request with new content or corrections</li>
<li class="">Share this project with colleagues who might benefit</li>
</ul>
<p>Let's build this together.</p>]]></content>
        <author>
            <name>Pablo J. Lebed</name>
            <uri>https://github.com/pablojlebed</uri>
        </author>
        <category label="ISO/IEC 17025" term="ISO/IEC 17025"/>
        <category label="QMS" term="QMS"/>
    </entry>
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