People I worked and played with in China are having a competition for people to hack
e-waste into something cool. Winners will receive prizes as well as the opportunity to
showcase their creations on Slate.
For details, please see the website and the press release is here (and copied, below):
http://www.greenelectronicschallenge.com/
and
http://www.newamerica.net/node/106312
Cheers,
Mitch.
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Future Tense Initiative & Tsinghua University Launch New U.S.-China Green Electronics
Competition
Competition to Encourage Innovation on E-Waste Prevention
Published: March 26, 2014
WASHINGTON, DC — The Future Tense initiative – a partnership of New America, Arizona State
University, and Slate magazine – is pleased to announce the launch of Green Electronics: A
U.S.-China Maker Challenge, an unprecedented online DIY competition focused on preventing
the creation of electronic waste (e-waste). The competition, a collaboration between
Future Tense, China's Tsinghua University and other partners, invites U.S. and Chinese
makers to find creative ways to turn yesterday's cellphone battery into tomorrow's
treasure.
"This is a great opportunity for the United States and China to work toward common
goals," said Emily Parker, senior fellow and digital diplomacy advisor at New
America, who helped spearhead this project. "Both the U.S. and China want to
encourage the innovation happening at the DIY or maker level, and both countries face the
challenge of reducing e-waste."
Electronic products tend to become unusable after just a few years, and items such as
computers, DVD players and cell phones frequently wind up in landfills. Some of the most
creative solutions to this problem may come from U.S. and Chinese makers, many of whom
already incorporate old electronic components into their DIY creations. Green electronics
will encourage makers to showcase their creations online.
Participants will be invited to upcycle or hack an electronic product to create a new
electronic product; repair an electronic product; create a sustainable electronic product;
or create artwork from used electronic products. They will show their inventions on
Instructables.com, where submissions will be accepted from April 7 - May 31, 2014.
Following a round of public voting, a panel of judges will choose the best selections from
each country. Winners will receive prizes as well as the opportunity to showcase their
creations on Slate.
Judges include Chris Anderson, former Wired editor; Joi Ito, Director of the MIT Media
Lab; Mitzi Montoya, Vice President and University Dean for Entrepreneurship &
Innovation at Arizona State University; and Sun Hong Bin, Dean of Educational Affairs at
Tsinghua University. Partners include Instructables, TechShop,
Hackerspaces.org,
XinCheJian, Autodesk, and Inventables.
For more information, please visit:
http://www.greenelectronicschallenge.com/