what is green technology? attendees of the greener gadgets conference give their 2 cents
What is Green Technology from Jennie Bourne on Vimeo.
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freecycle friday: post your best eco-tips to score this ipod for free!
note: since last week’s freecycle friday for this pretty pink and tan nova plaid stadium coat is deadlocked, you still have a chance to score it here.
now back to business - in honor of last friday’s phenomenal greener gadgets conference, this week’s freecycled goodie is a well-loved chase special edition ipod nano.
if you think you can give it a good home, comment on this post with your favorite eco-tip or product.
the comment with the most votes by friday (your friends can vote by commenting with your name) will score the nano for free!!!
more stuff for urban piggies
recycle your credit cards into namerings
new yorkers - did you know that you can switch to wind energy?
a universal green charger cuts down on waste and annoyance
recraft your papers into cute hermes birkin valentines
lust: greenaid grenade-shaped eco-bag
laid off? recycle your business cards for waste free catharsis
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saul griffith’s prediction for the future: heirloom products
this year’s greener gadgets conference touched on so many amazing and timely ideas about how human beings need to change the way they think about buying and discarding not only consumer electronics, but every object in our lives. the keynote address was given by inventor, technology renaissance man and stand up comedian (not really, but he should look into it!) dr. saul griffith who called himself and everyone in the audience a planetfucker! strong words, but no one was denying it.
dr. griffith presented way too many issues to contain in one post, so i’ll be writing them up in digestible little mini-posts beginning with what i thought was dr. griffith’s most powerful idea of all - his wish for us to throw away our notion that things can be discarded, because they really can’t, and adopt a culture of “heirloom products” that we keep with us for our whole lives and pass onto future generations.
he announced to the delight of the audience that he would be a father in seven weeks, and hoped to give his son with two things, a rolex watch and a mont blanc pen.
while he apologized for mentioning the name brands considering the current state of our economy, the point he really wanted to get across was that hopefully, his son will keep and cherish those two items so much that he will not feel the need to buy more watches and more pens throughout his life (okay, he may need a few more pens). i wondered if and how the consumer electronics industry, which has profited immensely from perceived obsolescence and the desire for constant upgrades would swallow this pill. wasn’t that like announcing at a dental convention that people would no longer get cavities? to my relief, no one threw produce, and many industry execs actually embraced the idea. how they could actually wrap their products around, and perhaps even profit from it still remains to be seen.
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