green LA girl

Samsung Restore: Good basic phone in greener packaging

Posted by Siel in environment,web/tech (Wednesday December 8, 2010 at 1:50 pm)

Samsung Restore

What exactly is a “green” phone? If you asked me, I’d say an energy-efficient, long-lasting phone with low radiation risks that’s made with safe, recycled and recyclable materials.

Sprint’s Samsung Restore meets some of those criteria — partially. Which is to say that while Sprint’s greener phone is one of the most eco-friendly ones out there — and likely greener than the one you’re holding, unless you got yours refurbished or held on to an oldie for at least a few years — it’s easy for an environmentalist to be disappointed with Restore simply because even the greenest new cell phones on the market are still far from truly green.

Basically, the Restore’s a phone in greener packaging. The phone casing’s made with 27 percent post-consumer recycled plastics — and the device itself is 77 percent recyclable, according to its website (84 percent recyclable according to Sprint’s Environmental Sustainability Communications Manager). And the whole product comes in almost all recyclable packaging — an all-recyclable box made with 70 percent post-consumer recycled paper and a few unfortunate small plastic baggies.

Samsung Restore

Eco-purists may already wonder why Sprint’s box isn’t 100 percent recycled and the phone 100 percent recyclable. They’ll be further disappointed that the Restore still “has low levels of PVC, BFRs, Phthalates, Beryllium,” according to Sprint’s communications manager. And while the Restore has an Energy Star certified AC adapter, the adapter’s specific to the device — and not usable or reusable with any other phone.

But to be fair, most phones have worse recyclability rates, come in very plasticky packaging, and contain higher levels of dangerous materials. And most phone companies make only minimal attempts to disclose — much less address — these green shortcomings. In that sense, Sprint’s ahead of the pack — even if it’s still not exactly a shining green beacon of sustainability.

Since most of the eco-features simply have to do with Restore’s packaging, the phone itself works pretty much just like other, less green phones in its price range. The full QWERTY keyboard makes texting and tweeting easy — though the Facebook and Google buttons are simply shortcuts to the mobile websites. The flashless 2.0-megapixel camera doesn’t take the best-quality photos, but will serve most people’s Facebooking needs well enough. According to CNet’s comprehensive, techier review, the phone’s call quality could be improved — but I had no issues calling in the L.A.-area. The speakerphone feature worked especially well for me — I used it for over an hour while trying to troubleshoot my Blackberry with Credo’s tech reps!

The Restore’s a pretty basic phone — so fancier phone users who like to run apps likely won’t want to downgrade to this one. But for the less app-happy public who still like to text and tweet, the Samsung Restore is available for $49.99 (after a $50 mail-in rebate) with a new two-year service agreement.

Earlier:
>> Eco-friendly phones — How green are they really?
>> Cell phone radiation worries — and how to reduce your health risks
>> Old cell phones: How many have you recycled?
>> Sprint’s in-store buyback program: Instant credit for recycling phones
>> Pick safer smart phone: Droid, Nexus One are top radiation emitters

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How many factory farms are in your county?

Posted by Siel in environment,food,web/tech (Wednesday December 1, 2010 at 10:19 pm)

If you watched “Food, Inc.” or read “Gristle,” you know the many downsides of factory farming — from food safety issues to human health problems to environmental pollution. Now comes a tool that’ll let you see just how close to home the problems of factory farming are. Factory Farm Map, an interactive web tool put together by environmental nonprofit Food and Water Watch, lets you see just how much factory farming’s happening in your county and state.

I, of course, looked up the numbers for Los Angeles County and California. I think of my county as a largely urban area, but apparently, quite a lot of factory farming goes on in my ‘hood — enough to earn the county an orange “severe” label from Food and Water Watch.

You can also get charts and graphs illustrating each state and county’s stats. Find out the total number of factory farmed animals and the average number of animals per site in your state — and see how your county’s numbers compare to those of neighbor counties.

I actually wish the map was more detailed, so I could find out exactly where these factory farms in L.A. County are located and how close they are to me. Maybe Food and Water watch will have that info when they launch version 2.0.

Another interesting finding I discovered from Factory Farm Map: Alaska has no factory farms! How does your state compare?

Images via Food and Water Watch

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‘Play Again’: When digital kids play IRL (free L.A. screening)

Posted by Siel in art/lit/music,events,film,losangeles,web/tech (Tuesday November 23, 2010 at 4:40 pm)

Do you think twice about accepting a friend’s dinner invitation on a Sunday — because that would mean missing Dexter? Does your anxiety level get unbearable — if you go a day without checking Facebook and Twitter? Perhaps your TV and internet addiction hasn’t gotten that bad — but a new documentary film called “Play Again” is sure to make you rethink your digital habits.

Though I’m on both Facebook and Twitter, I do feel lucky I grew up (at least according to my driver’s license) before either of those got invented. Kids today are not that lucky. What happens when you grow up spending more time in front of a screen than interacting with real humans face to face or playing in nature? We’ll find out soon, because that is indeed how the average American child grows up today.

“Play Again” follows the lives six American teenagers who spend between five to 15 hours a day in front of screens. These kids are then released from their digital umbilical cords to go on a wilderness adventure — sans cell phones or TVs.

“Play Again” will screen as part of the Artivist Festival at noon on Dec. 4 at the Egyptian Theatre, 6712 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles. Even better, a select number of free tickets are available, so long as you reserve them before they run out! The screening will be followed by a filmmaker Q&A panel and a reception. The film is also screening at festivals and events across the U.S. and is available on DVD for $19.95.

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The Story of Electronics — and the story of my 4.5-year-old laptop

Posted by Siel in environment,web/tech (Wednesday November 10, 2010 at 5:16 pm)

Siel's old laptop during happier daysLast week, my laptop crashed. Fixing it would have cost about as much as buying a new laptop — so buy a new laptop I did, after spending $99 just to have BestBuy’s geek squad tell me the old laptop would cost a lot to fix!

Still, I’m proud to say that I used that old laptop for 4.5 years — far longer than the 18 months or so the average electronic product gets used. Fittingly, the speed with which new electronics become broken electronics is the latest topic taken up by Annie Leonard and the rest of the team behind The Story of Stuff.

The latest short eco-educational cartoon video’s The Story of Electronics — which follows the short life of electronics that are “Designed for the Dump” — a.k.a. designed for planned obsolescence. From causing miscarriages and cancer in employees making the electronics to wreaking environmental havoc in less-developed countries where old electronics get dumped, The Story of Electronics is not a happy tale.

That said, there is some good news. More electronics manufacturers are instituting take-back programs — although many of these programs are still pretty sucky, as the Electronic Takeback Coalition’s latest report card points out. The end-of-life recycling issue is actually the reason I again got a Dell laptop this time around. Dell has what pretty much everyone agrees is the best end-of-life program for its computers. Once I finish attempting to salvage whatever information’s still intact on my old laptop’s hard drive, I can simply ask Dell — via an online form — to pick up my old computer from my home for responsible recycling — free of charge. This type of convenient service is one that every manufacturer should offer — but does not.

Of course, some onus falls on the electronics users and their lust for the latest gadgets. My laptop — and my old cell phone too — got weird looks from people because I’d used them for so long. Most people, however, upgrade as soon as they possibly can — often every year or so. That’s why more concerned environmentalists are creating everything from DIY fix-it manuals to retro electronics shops to fight planned obsolescence — one small gadget at a time.

Be honest — How long have you had the computer you’re reading this blog post on?

Earlier:
>> Get happy by spending less: Buy tomorrow, moodle today
>> A Superguide for e-recycling: Make money, not e-waste
>> Green tech guides: Making greener gadget shopping easier
>> Shop smart and save green on electronics and gadgets
>> Oh the things you can recycle
>> If it is broken, recycle it — The first green LA girl post!

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“Adopt” your favorite wild animal without leaving Facebook

Posted by Siel in environment,web/tech (Wednesday October 27, 2010 at 11:07 am)

I can proudly say I never got sucked into playing Farmville — but I did, for some reason, get addicted to playing Zoo World on Facebook for a few months. If you’ve gotten obsessed with raising virtual chickens or feeding virtual pandas on Facebook, there’s now help for you. You can now protect real life animals — like my favorite, the Atlantic puffin — without leaving Facebook.

How so? World Wildlife Fund’s put its entire gift catalog on Facebook! To adopt a real animal, just click over to pick from more than a hundred species. I recommend the puffin!

Lest any MNN readers mistakenly think WWF’s capturing wild animals and sending them to adopter’s homes, rest assured the adoptions are really just symbolic. The money you spend to “adopt” doesn’t really get you a real life animal to call your own — but goes towards funding WWF’s work to protect wildlife. That’s why the cost of adopting a cute little puffin is the same as adopting larger, less cute animals! After all, the small plush versions of the adopted animals that donators receive are all about the same size.

And in fact, the adoption fees are kind of on a sliding scale. You can pay as much as $250 to “adopt” a family of sea turtles — or as little as $25 to adopt a very cute puffin. The amount you spend basically affects the amount of cute WWF shwag you get (Plush animals, among which the puffin is the cutest, only come with a $50 donation or more) — and less selfishly, the work WWF’s able to do.

Now, while I love that WWF’s made symbolic wildlife adoptions easier for Facebook addicts, I do wish there was a way to make these adoptions into a sort of game — basically by offering not just plush versions of wildlife, but virtual versions as well. I mean, judging from the popularity of Farmville, it seems many people not yet willing to plunk down $25 for a symbolic adoption of a puffin may make microdonations over time to adopt virtual puffin families to care for — donations that could add up to $25 relatively quickly….

No such game is available as of yet, but WWF said in a press release that it plans to launch online quiz called “Find Your Inner Animal.” (I hope I’m a puffin!) You can also “friend” animals — so far limited to tigers, pandas, polar bears and sadly, not puffins — to get updates on WWF’s conservation work related to them.

Top photo by U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service – Northeast Region; bottom photo via WWF

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