Compost your next phone?
The field of bioplastics (plastics made from feed stocks other than petroleum) has been growing every year, but for the most part the use of biodegradable or "organic" plastic has been limited to low-cost items like plastic forks and food packaging.
link:
| « Previous SendMeHome: Digital lost and found | Next » U.S. gets first solar power tower |
Comments(14)
Posted By Goliath - Tue, Oct 06 2009 at 4:12 AM ESTRAWR IMPROPER BIBLICAL REFERENCE!
Because it'd get outdated and people will scrap them anyways I suppose.
Posted By bad boy in the backbench - Sat, Sep 05 2009 at 8:12 AM ESTYeah right!
There are people actually buying this ****! That Samsung who makes so much of stupid **** in this world, is going green. Oh celebrate.. mankind!!! Maybe we can get that corporate whores Peta or Greenpeace arrange a song and dance competition on the eve of this...
Retards!!!
Posted By Anonymous - Fri, Aug 28 2009 at 5:22 PM ESTlive in the dark
If you really want to go green, turn of your power and take a bath in the creek.
Posted By Andy Weissman - Fri, Aug 14 2009 at 2:10 PM ESTPart of Proceeds go to The Nature Conservancy
Sprint and Samsung are thinking green and investing in nature by dedicating a portion of each sale to support The Nature Conservancy and its efforts on the land and in our oceans, lakes and rivers.
Posted By Anonymous - Fri, Aug 14 2009 at 12:41 AM ESTCorn costs more
Soy and hemp would be better than corn. The only reason corn is used for anything "green" is because it's more expensive. Harvesting corn is actually bad for the environment because the "Nitrogen and phosphorus from agricultural fertilizer have been found to promote excess growth of algae in water bodies..." which deprives the water from oxygen creating dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico making it.... More
Posted By Lancastrian - Wed, Aug 12 2009 at 11:57 AM ESTCorn is not green
Corn is not an environmentally friendly crop due to the amount of fertilizer and other chemicals used to grow it. It is heavily subsidized by the government, which is why we lack agricultural diversity. There are other crops, such as hemp, that are much greener, easier to grow and useful for thousands of applications. So while this phone is an experiment, a truly green phone will have to make use of some other material. Personally, I think that people could make standard phones a whole lot.... More
Posted By Anonymous - Sat, Aug 08 2009 at 3:36 PM ESTWorthless effort
So what do you suppose to TOTAL volume of "bio" plastic in the entire run of these phones will be? Won't be much when you add it up. Mixed with a majority of regular plastic means that it's not biodegradable after all. I gave up on Samsung anyway. I'd consider the Saga if they would get with the rest of the industry and ditch proprietary connectors for everything. That alone accounts for more waste in peripherals and adapters than anything they could hope to accomplish with this "green" effort..... More
Posted By John Davis - Sat, Aug 08 2009 at 8:01 AM ESTNice
Its nice to see someone doing something GOOD for change!
Posted By kevin - Sat, Aug 08 2009 at 7:48 AM ESTNice *Marketing* Effort
according to michael pollner (fresh air interview with terry gross, oct 2008) it takes a gallon of gasoline to produce 1.2 gallons of biodiesel. i don't know how much fossil fuel it takes to produce "bio-plastic" but i'm guessing it's a lot. we do need to try to manufacture products that are as biodegradable as possible, but in a sustainable way!
Posted By Muwasalat.com - Sat, Aug 08 2009 at 5:12 AM ESTNice effort
It is always to see A GIANT in mobile technology to give it a go for a green product.
Really looking forward to biodegradable batteries.
Posted By Anonymous - Fri, Aug 07 2009 at 10:55 AM ESTCorn Products are not sustainable
Any corn biobased product uses more fossil fuels than plastic. That is a fact. And corn items are disposable only in commercial and municipal composts. BUT you have added poly to it, so it won't break down there or in a landfill. So it is bad on both ends. Nice going. The World Bank stated that 75% of the food shortages in the world today are due to the diversion of corn from food and feedstock to plastics and ethanol. (Both of which are not sustainable and use more fossil fuels than regular.... More
Posted By Anonymous - Sat, Aug 08 2009 at 11:10 AM ESTYou're incorrect
You don't have your facts straight, try posting after you read up on what these phones are made of, what fuels are needed to produce certain items compared to these, and what happens when a phone is made from sugar, soy, or out of many types of grasses.



Link

Stumble
Tweet











Just Make Quality Products that last longer
Why doesn't Samsung just make products that last for 20 years instead of 2 and a half. This would solve a lot of the problem, but their shareholders wouldn't like it!