Archive for the ‘Green’ Category

Mecum recycled notebooks

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

 Blogimages Mecum-Note

Bobby over @ Kitsune Noir happened upon these little recycled notebooks from OrangeArt Stationary -

Mecum translates to “Let’s Go!”, and features not only recycled paper, but the leather cover is recycled as well. As you can see it comes in both a natural and black (hot!) version. Other than the leather cover they’re pretty identical to any sort of moleskine/field notes, but the recycled leather feels pretty nice.

- Mecum Recycled leather notebooks

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Original post by Collin Cunningham

Cruise Night@The Steel Yard: veggie oil conversions and more

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

The Steel Yard in Providence, RI is holding its 3rd annual Cruise Night on Wednesday, September 10:

From 4 ’till dark come to the Steel Yard to check out homemade hot rods, custom bikes, eco-friendly conversions and tunes spun by The Colonel. There will be food and drinks available as well as tours of the Steel Yard studio.
It’s free to the public!

Cruise Night 2008.

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Original post by Brian Jepson

Akhter’s LoCO2PC looks like an ugly monitor, doesn’t need much power

Monday, September 1st, 2008

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Call it fate, or call it the beginning of an unsightly trend, but whatever the case, we’re seeing the second all-in-one green PC this week in the Akhter LoCO2PC. Designed to look like an atypically thick LCD 19-inch monitor, this energy-sipping desktop hums along at 3GHz while sucking down just 55-watts (or less) while in use; when it falls to sleep, it consumes just 3-watts. The 19-inch panel boasts an SXGA (1,280 x 1,024) resolution, HDMI output, 250GB hard drive, 802.11b/g WiFi and your choice of a Celeron dual-core or Core 2 Duo processor. Prices range from £539 ($975) to £639 ($1,156) depending on options, but considering just how much energy you’ll be saving (or so they say), the price is totally justified.

[Via PC World]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Green exercise

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

The Green Microgym recently opened in Portland, Oregon - in addition to using solar panels and green building materials, they’re working with several companies that harvest power from gym equipment, including ReRev and Human Dynamo.

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Kinetic charger

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Original post by Patti Schiendelman

‘Junk’ raft

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Art.Raft.Ap
The raft was made of 15,000 plastic bottles and a Cessna fuselage….

Tanned, dirty and hungry, two men who spent three months crossing the Pacific on a raft made of plastic bottles to raise awareness of ocean debris finally stepped onto dry land. The raft was made of 15,000 plastic bottles and a Cessna fuselage. “We made it,” hollered Marcus Eriksen to a crowd of about two dozen gathered at Ala Wai Harbor on Wednesday. “Where’s the food?” Friends greeted Eriksen and fellow eco-mariner Joel Paschal with lei, fresh food and beer to celebrate the end of their 2,600-mile voyage on what they call the JUNK raft. “We got used to eating fish and peanut butter,” said Eriksen, who celebrated his 41st birthday at sea. The pair left Long Beach, California, on June 1. Their 30-foot vessel had a deck of salvaged sailboat masts, six pontoons filled with 15,000 plastic bottles and a cabin made from the fuselage of a Cessna airplane. While at sea they realized they were only traveling half a mile per hour and it would take them much longer to reach Hawaii than the previously anticipated six weeks.

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Original post by Phillip Torrone

Japanese firms to partially propel cargo ship via solar panels

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

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First things first — when we say “partially” propel, we mean partially. Nippon Yusen and energy distributor Nippon Oil are teaming up to spend around $1.37 million in order to equip a car-hauling cargo ship with 328 solar panels. Rather than just provide energy for the crew’s on board entertainment system, it will be the first solar installation to actually produce a smidgen of power for the boat’s engine. If successful, the panels would provide 0.2% of the ship’s energy consumption for propulsion, and they’re hoping to raise that to a whopping 1% by 2010. Gives a whole new meaning to “baby steps,” huh?

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Original post by Darren Murph

Carbon-neutral Ziggurat pyramid could house 1.1 million in Dubai

Monday, August 25th, 2008

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As we learned from Wall-E, people with half a mind for themselves probably won’t be kosher with living with 1.1 million or so other inhabitants within a pyramid. That being said, there’s always the brainwash approach to getting ‘em in there, and if hordes of people were ever filed into the conceptual Ziggurat, Mother Earth would surely appreciate it. The 2.3-square kilometer building would be able to house over 1 million people and be “almost totally self-sufficient energy-wise.” By tapping into the planet’s renewable resources, designers assert that it could practically be carbon-neutral, and given that transport within the machine would be connected by an “integrated 360-degree network,” fuel-burning cars would be pointless. As with most things in Dubai, this one seems larger than life, but if the Burj Al Arab is any indication, there’s at least a minuscule chance this thing comes to fruition.

[Via Inhabitat]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Urban Sustainability Q&A With Scott Kellogg

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Scott Kellogg, author of Toolbox for Sustainable City Living: A Do-It-Ourselves Guide, took the time to let me pick his brain. He’s also agreed to check out the comments below himself; if you’re lucky, he might even answer some of your questions there.

trashisland.jpg
A sketch of a floating trash island from Scott’s book.

1. What project have you built that you’re most proud of?

If I had to pick one, it would be the floating trash islands [water-loving plants growing on a
raft made of plastic bottles]: they’re beautiful, utilize trash and recycled materials, create wildlife habitat, and remediate urban stormwater runoff, which is a nasty problem. It’s a synthesis of trash to mimic nature: chunks of river banks will sometimes float away naturally. Slaughterhouses use a similar concept to filter cesspools, but theirs relies on expensive components and chemicals.


2. What one project, from your book or otherwise, would you recommend as a good introduction to DIY sustainability?

For a general audience, the thing i would recommend to most people to do is keep a worm box: it’s simple, doesn’t smell, and you can do it in your apartment apartment. For the more technically inclined, I want to see people play with autonomous energy systems, especially efficient small-scale wind turbines. I want to see people really try to push the envelope on how to build safe and efficient turbines producing significant wattage using recycled materials. Also passive solar technology, specifically parabolas. In general, making sustainable technology more practical, simpler, and cheaper, using your intelligence and skills in ways that benefit people who don’t have access to tools, information, know-how…

3. In your book, you criticized the use of solar cells because of a lack of affordability and long-term availability, while others say we should use tech and high-embodied energy resources, like concrete, while they’re still available. And, others are paralyzed into inaction by the many downstream impacts of any project. Do you have any heuristics to quickly decide when a technology makes sense to employ in a project, to differentiate between necessary sustainable tech vs. technofetishism?

I don’t have cut-and-dry criteria: there’s a lot of gray areas. Generally I try to make things that can be built quickly and cheaply using recycled materials, user-serviceable, and whoever is using the technology can process the waste in the end. It’s sort of a continuum, transitional strategies like solar panels in the middle. They’re much better than coal or nuclear, but they’re not the magic bullet to energy problems. Nothing against them, the Rhizome Collective has a 3,200-watt system from the Austin Energy rebate program. We did it because it’s better than burning coal. I want to caution people not to be looking to solar as the solution to all their problems, because active solar will never be affordable to those in the global south.

4. Do you see a gap between permaculture movements and and the DIY technology scenes? If so, how can we bring them more together?

I look at both of the groups as same but different: there’s a lot of crossover. I mean, food is primary to everything, we all have to eat, we all have to have drinkable water… that’s our greatest commonality across barriers, the need for food. we can think of this as the base of the pyramid, and work together to teach each other about both the technology and the traditional knowledge of the land.

5. You wrote about inspections of composting toilets, and I’m going through the same bureaucratic mess w/ some of my projects. Is this worth the time, or should we all be moving to the West Texas Desert or a different, less-developed country to spend more time on building and less on bureaucracy?

They both need to happen. Basically, the systems need to be first experimented with, tinkered with, to figure out what works so that by the time a system’s ready to get approved through all those roadblocks you’ve got the details worked out and have the data ready to present. There’s plenty of need to do this work on a clandestine level as well as on a broad-scale, more mainstream level.

6. A theme of many of the questions in the comments was ‘that’s all well and good for extremists, but what can I do now without quitting my day job doing engineering in corporate America?’

If I had a better grasp on calculus, I would totally become an engineer myself. I think there needs to be a lot more radical engineers out there, a league of radical engineers. In order for a lot of these systems to be applied on a broad scale, the legal obstacles to their application need to be removed. By having these systems approved, by having an engineer put their stamp on it, that clears the way. This is a lot to think about with time and money constraints; we just this year got a composting toilet approved by the City of Austin. As far as I know, it’s the first user-built composting toilet to be code-approved. It took us 4 years to do this, and the only thing that made it possible then was that an environmental engineer I worked with put her stamp on it. People are understandably concerned about liability issues… if we get more radical engineers out there, there’s hope.


7. How can i convince you to open-source this book?

Well, The Humanure Handbook’s online and free… it’s really up to our publishers, we don’t own the rights to the book. We’ll try to talk to them about the possibility.

Thanks again for your time, Scott. Makers: let me know who else you have questions for and I’ll do my best to get to it!

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Original post by Luke Iseman

Texas Instruments gets excited about energy scavenging

Monday, August 25th, 2008

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Texas Instruments has a lot to do with the original microchip, if for no other reason than being the employer of inventor Jack Kilby. Now, however, TI is looking to produce chips and other related gizmos that require an infinitesimally small amount of energy to operate. The overriding theme guiding the engineers is “energy scavenging,” which alludes to grasping power from even the most unlikely of places — vibrations from a bridge as cars pass over, capturing wasted exhaust from a car or bottling up all that frustration your sibling shows when you own him / her again in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. The possibilities are just about endless, with networked battery-free smoke alarms, solar-powered mobiles and gaming laptops that feed off of extraordinarily focused brain waves in the mix. Okay, so that last one is still eons from reality, but at least we’re headed in that direction.

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Original post by Darren Murph

Unpacking Our Chickens

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

After several rounds of possum-, dog-, and raccoon-related mishaps, we’ve just received our third round of chickens. Here’s my patient partner Amanda May unpacking the chicks and explaining the process:


Here’s where we ordered the chickens and information on the assortment.
Believe it or not, there are apparently chickens who will lay green and blue tinted eggs!

If you’re pursuing backyard chickens, the following may be helpful as well:

In spite of inquiries with numerous Austin officials, I can’t find any actual regulation limiting the number of chickens: there’s just noise regulations and a 50-foot setback from residences. So, I’ll test that by having 25 birds living in my yard… Happy backyard chickening!

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Original post by Luke Iseman

Shuttle’s Atom-powered X27 mini PC goes easy on the power bill

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

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Shuttle has always been small, but now it’s hopping on the completely overcrowded green bandwagon with its latest mini PC. The X27, which sports an admittedly sleek shell, will suck down as little as 23-watts while idle and 36-watts while in use. Additionally, the unit will include one of Intel’s Atom chips, and as predicted, fan noise shouldn’t be an issue. The entire case measures just 10- x 7- x 2.75-inches, and while a price hasn’t been outed for the September-bound nettop, we’d expect to hear more as IFA gets going on the 29th.

[Thanks, Adam]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Make Your Own Potato Plastic

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

It looks like plastic made from a potato is a lot more flexible and clear compared to plastic made from milk. Either one is a nice eco-friendly alternative to the petroleum based variety. Although I think it’s actual usefulness may be a bit limited.

In this video we make a batch of potato plastic based on an instructable by Brandon121233. For this project you will need potato starch, white vinegar, baking soda, water, and glycerin (which can be found at most pharmacies). The tools for this project are a stove and saucer pan, in addition you’ll need a blender, knife, and peeler if you’re making your own starch.

Read more about making Potato Plastic

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Make Plastic from milk

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Original post by Marc de Vinck

The DCMC Binding System

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

451360702_8bf8cdbbfc.jpg
So what exactly is the DCMC binding system? DCMC stands for “Dirt Cheap Milk Container” and it’s a really clever way of binding a book. It allows you easily add or remove pages based on your needs, kind of like a 3 ring binder.

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Original post by Marc de Vinck

Power-sipping Eco Ride urban transportation system to hit Japan

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

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Japan’s not hurting for trains, but what’s the addition of another going to hurt? Senyo Kogyo and Senyo Kiko have jointly announced plans to construct a test line for an energy-saving urban transportation system this October. Dubbed Eco Ride, the “roller coaster-like” system in Chiba Prefecture will operate “using the height difference on the railway,” and furthermore, there will be drive units (complete with clanks and clangs, we bet) “installed at various points on the railway so that the Eco Ride can obtain the potential energy to run.” Reportedly, Eco Ride would likely remain just a short-distance transportation system even if expanded, but no matter how you slice it, it sure beats taking the Segway to work.

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Original post by Darren Murph

A truck grows in Sacramento

Monday, August 18th, 2008

MAKE Editor and Publisher Dale Dougherty writes from the California State Fair:

Here is one of my favorite sights, a “green” truck in the Farm area. It’s an old truck covered in grass with vegetables and flowers growing in the flat bed. Talk about a raised bed! Think how the yards of rural America could be transformed once rusty wrecks become warm and fuzzy, like something out of a Pixar movie.

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Original post by Gareth Branwyn


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